Abstract

Non-canonical NF-κB-pathway signaling is integral in immunoregulation. Heterozygous mutations in NFKB2 have recently been established as a molecular cause of common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) and DAVID-syndrome, a rare condition combining deficiency of anterior pituitary hormone with CVID. Here, we investigate 15 previously unreported patients with primary immunodeficiency (PID) from eleven unrelated families with heterozygous NFKB2-mutations including eight patients with the common p.Arg853* nonsense mutation and five patients harboring unique novel C-terminal truncating mutations. In addition, we describe the clinical phenotype of two patients with proximal truncating mutations. Cohort analysis extended to all 35 previously published NFKB2-cases revealed occurrence of early-onset PID in 46/50 patients (mean age of onset 5.9 years, median 4.0 years). ACTH-deficiency occurred in 44%. Three mutation carriers have deceased, four developed malignancies. Only two mutation carriers were clinically asymptomatic. In contrast to typical CVID, most patients suffered from early-onset and severe disease manifestations, including clinical signs of T cell dysfunction e.g., chronic-viral or opportunistic infections. In addition, 80% of patients suffered from (predominately T cell mediated) autoimmune (AI) phenomena (alopecia > various lymphocytic organ-infiltration > diarrhea > arthritis > AI-cytopenia). Unlike in other forms of CVID, auto-antibodies or lymphoproliferation were not common hallmarks of disease. Immunophenotyping showed largely normal or even increased quantities of naïve and memory CD4+ or CD8+ T-cells and normal T-cell proliferation. NK-cell number and function were also normal. In contrast, impaired B-cell differentiation and hypogammaglobinemia were consistent features of NFKB2-associated disease. In addition, an array of lymphocyte subpopulations, such as regulatory T cell, Th17-, cTFH-, NKT-, and MAIT-cell numbers were decreased. We conclude that heterozygous damaging mutations in NFKB2 represent a distinct PID entity exceeding the usual clinical spectrum of CVID. Impairment of the non-canonical NF-κB pathways affects function and differentiation of numerous lymphocyte-subpopulations and thus causes a heterogeneous, more severe form of PID phenotype with early-onset. Further characteristic features are multifaceted, primarily T cell-mediated autoimmunity, such as alopecia, lymphocytic organ infiltration, and in addition frequently ACTH-deficiency.

Highlights

  • Common variable immunodeficiency (CVID [MIM 607594]) is a primary antibody deficiency syndrome defined by hypogammaglobulinemia, impaired production of specific antibodies, increased susceptibility to infections, and exclusion of secondary causes

  • Canonical and non-canonical NF-κB signaling is of central importance for various aspects of immunoregulation, mutations in NFKB1 and NFKB2 have only very recently been recognized as a molecular origin of the disease phenotype in CVID

  • This illustrates that clinical expressivity and penetrance of NFKB2 mutations resulting in DAVID-Syndrome, primary immunodeficiency (PID)- or isolated ACTH-deficiency are heterogenic and difficult to predict based on the genetic alteration

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Summary

Introduction

Common variable immunodeficiency (CVID [MIM 607594]) is a primary antibody deficiency syndrome defined by hypogammaglobulinemia, impaired production of specific antibodies, increased susceptibility to (primarily sinopulmonary) infections, and exclusion of secondary causes. The phenotype is complex, heterogeneous, and may include additional features, such as lymphoproliferation and autoimmunity. With an estimated prevalence of 1/10,000–50,000 CVID is the most common symptomatic primary immunodeficiency (PID) [1, 2]. Given that certain diagnostic criteria define CVID, it has been termed an “umbrella diagnosis” [3]. The genetic basis of CVID is gradually being unraveled. Monogenetic defects may represent distinct disease entities with particular phenotypes. Following identification in 2013 and 2015, heterozygous mutations in NFKB1 and NFKB2 represent the largest CVID subgroups with known monogenetic mutations [5, 6]

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