Abstract

The association between cancer and autoimmune disease is unexplained, exemplified by Tcell large granular lymphocytic leukemia (T-LGL) where gain-of-function (GOF) somatic STAT3 mutations correlate with co-existing autoimmunity. To investigate whether these mutations are the cause or consequence of CD8+ Tcell clonal expansions and autoimmunity, we analyzed patients and mice with germline STAT3 GOF mutations. STAT3 GOF mutations drove the accumulation of effector CD8+ Tcell clones highly expressing NKG2D, the receptor for stress-induced MHC-class-I-related molecules. This subsetalso expressed genes for granzymes, perforin, interferon-γ, and Ccl5/Rantes and required NKG2D and the IL-15/IL-2 receptor IL2RB for maximal accumulation. Leukocyte-restricted STAT3 GOF was sufficient and CD8+ Tcells were essential for lethal pathology in mice. These results demonstrate that STAT3 GOF mutations cause effector CD8+ Tcell oligoclonal accumulation and that these rogue cells contribute to autoimmune pathology, supporting the hypothesis that somatic mutations in leukemia/lymphoma driver genes contribute to autoimmune disease.

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