Development of Autologous, Oligoclonal, Poorly Functioning T Lymphocytes in a Patient With Autosomal Recessive Severe Combined Immunodeficiency Caused by Defects of the Jak3 Tyrosine Kinase

Author:

Brugnoni Duilio1,Notarangelo Luigi D.1,Sottini Alessandra1,Airò Paolo1,Pennacchio Marta1,Mazzolari Evelina1,Signorini Simona1,Candotti Fabio1,Villa Anna1,Mella Patrizia1,Vezzoni Paolo1,Cattaneo Roberto1,Ugazio Alberto G.1,Imberti Luisa1

Affiliation:

1. From the Servizio di Immunologia Clinica, Clinica Pediatrica, Consorzio per le Biotecnologie, III Laboratorio Analisi, Spedali Civili, Brescia; and Istituto di Tecnologie Biomediche Avanzate, CNR, Milano, Italy.

Abstract

Abstract Defects of the common gamma chain subunit of the cytokine receptors (γc) or of Jak3, a tyrosine kinase required for γc signal transduction, result in T−B+ severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID). However, atypical cases, characterized by progressive development of T lymphocytes, have been also reported. We describe a child with SCID caused by Jak3 gene defects, which strongly but not completely affect Jak3 protein expression and function, who developed a substantial number (>3,000/μL) of autologous CD3+CD4+ T cells. These cells showed a primed/activated phenotype (CD45R0+ Fas+HLA-DR+ CD62Llo), defective secretion of T-helper 1 and T-helper 2 cytokines, reduced proliferation to mitogens, and a high in vitro susceptibility to spontaneous (caused by downregulation of bcl-2 expression) as well as activation-induced cell death. A restricted T-cell receptor repertoire was observed, with oligoclonal expansion within each of the dominant segments. These features resemble those observed in γc-/y and in Jak3−/−mice, in which a population of activated, anergic T cells (predominantly CD4+) also develops with age. These results suggest that residual Jak3 expression and function or other Jak3-independent signals may also permit the generation of CD4+ T cells that undergo in vivo clonal expansion in humans; however, these mechanisms do not allow development of CD8+ T cells, nor do they fully restore the functional properties of CD4+ T lymphocytes.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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