Abstract
Omenn syndrome (OS) is characterized by a peculiar severe T-cell immune deficiency associated with autoimmunelike manifestations. Dysregulations of the central and peripheral immune tolerance, mediated by the protein autoimmune regulator (AIRE) and regulatory T cells, respectively, were proposed as possible mechanisms of this aberrant inflammatory process. We studied mechanisms of central and peripheral tolerance in patients with OS and also examined the gene expression profile associated with OS features. T-cell receptor diversity, DNA rearrangement, and the expression of AIRE and forkhead box P3 mRNA as well as the expression of regulatory T cells in cells obtained from patients with OS were studied. Characterization of gene expression in these cells was carried out by using the TaqMan Low-Density Array. Transcript expression of peripheral blood AIRE but not forkhead box P3 was reduced in patients with OS. The expression of natural killer T and regulatory T cells was normal, although the latter showed an abnormal CD4-negative population. Patients with OS have oligoclonal T cells with limited DNA recombination activity, including the presence of early but not late T-cell maturation events, regardless of the genetic defect underlying the syndrome. The transcriptional profile associated with OS features reveals significant changes in 25.5% of the tested genes compared with normal control. Our findings suggest that T-cell oligoclonal expansion in OS emanates from an incomplete block before the maturation stage of negative selection, which may explain escape of autoreactive T cells from the thymus. Dysregulated genes in patients with OS are closely involved with self-tolerance and autoimmunity.
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