OTULIN-related conditions: Report of a new case and review of the literature using GenIA

Author:

Caballero-Oteyza Andrés1,Crisponi Laura2,Peng Xiao P.3,Wang Hongying4,Mrovecova Pavla5,Olla Stefania2,Siguri Chiara2,Marnissi Farida6,Jouhadi Zineb6,Aksentijevich Ivona4,Grimbacher Bodo5,Proietti Michele7

Affiliation:

1. Cluster of Excellence "RESIST - Resolving Infection Susceptibility"

2. National Research Council

3. Johns Hopkins University

4. National Human Genome Research Institute

5. University Medical Center Freiburg

6. University of Hassan II Casablanca

7. Hannover Medical School

Abstract

Abstract

OTULIN encodes an eponymous linear deubiquitinase (DUB), which through the regulation of M1-Ub dynamics, is essential for controlling inflammation as a negative regulator of the canonical NF-𝛋B signaling pathway. Biallelic loss-of-function (LOF) mutations in OTULIN cause an autosomal recessive condition named Otulin-Related Autoinflammatory Syndrome (ORAS), also known as Otulipenia or AutoInflammation, Panniculitis, and Dermatosis Syndrome (AIPDS). Monoallelic OTULIN LOF, also known as OTULIN Haploinsufficiency (OHI) or Immunodeficiency 107 (IMD107), has been linked to an incompletely penetrant, dominantly inherited susceptibility to invasive Staphylococcal infections. At the same time, a recent novel ORAS-like inflammatory syndrome was described in association with a heterozygous missense mutation that appears to exert dominant negative effects. In this manuscript, we report the identification of a novel homozygous missense mutation, c.595T>A; p.(Trp199Arg), in a Moroccan infant with an ORAS phenotype. We go on to systematically review the literature for OTULIN-related human disease phenotypes by using the GenIA databaseto collect, extract and harmonize all clinical, laboratory and functional data for published patients and variants. Our comprehensive synthesis of genotypic, phenotypic, and mechanistic data enables a more in-depth view of the diverse mechanisms and pathways by which the OTULIN pathogenic variants may lead to human immune disease. This review may help variant classification activities and the drafting of diagnostic and management guidelines; but it also identifies outstanding knowledge gaps and raises additional questions for future investigation.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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