Whole-exome sequencing of T-B+ severe combined immunodeficiency in Egyptian infants, JAK3 predominance and novel variants

Author:

El Hawary R1ORCID,Meshaal S1ORCID,Mauracher A A2,Opitz L3,Abd Elaziz D4,Lotfy S4,Eldash A1,Boutros J4,Galal N4,Pachlopnik Schmid J2,Elmarsafy A4

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Medicine, Clinical Pathology Department, Cairo University, Cairo, Egypt

2. Division of Immunology, University Children's Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland

3. ETH Zurich, Functional Genomics Center Zürich, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland

4. Faculty of Medicine, Pediatrics Department, Cairo University, Cairo, Egypt

Abstract

Summary Severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) is fatal if not treated with immune reconstitution. In Egypt, T-B+ SCID accounts for 38·5% of SCID diagnoses. An accurate genetic diagnosis is essential for choosing appropriate treatment modalities and for offering genetic counseling to the patient's family. The objectives of this study were to describe the clinical, immunological and molecular characteristics of a cohort of twenty Egyptian patients with T-B+ SCID. The initial diagnosis (based on clinical features and flow cytometry) was followed by molecular investigation (whole-exome sequencing). All patients had the classic clinical picture for SCID, including failure to thrive (n = 20), oral candidiasis (n = 17), persistent diarrhea (n = 14), pneumonia (n = 13), napkin dermatitis (n = 10), skin rash (n = 7), otitis media (n = 3) and meningitis (n = 2). The onset of manifestations was at the age of 2·4 ± 1·6 months and diagnosis at the age of 6·7 ± ·5 months, giving a diagnostic delay of 4·3 months. JAK3 gene variants were most frequent (n = 12) with three novel variants identified, followed by IL2Rγ variants (n = 6) with two novel variants. IL7Rα and CD3ε variants were found once, with a novel variant each. T-B+NK− SCID accounted for approximately 90% of the Egyptian patients with T-B+SCID. Of these T-B+NK− SCID cases, 60% were autosomal recessive syndromes caused by JAK3 mutations and 30% were X-linked syndromes. It might be useful to sequence the JAK3 gene (i.e. targeted Sanger sequencing) in all T-B+ SCID patients, especially after X-linked SCID has been ruled out. Hence, no more than 10% of T-B+ SCID patients might require next-generation for a molecular diagnosis.

Funder

The Promedica foundation

The Children's Research Centre of the University Children's Hospital of ‎Zurich ‎

The Clinical Research Priority Program of the University of Zurich for the CRPP ‎CYTIMM-Z

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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