Alejandro C Briones, Ana V Marin, Rebeca Chaparro-García, Marta López-Nevado, David Abia, Ivan Estevez-Benito, Daniel Chacón-Arguedas, Edgar Fernández-Malavé, Paula P Cardenas, José R Regueiro
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: The CD247 chain of the T-cell receptor (TCR) is essential for normal T cell development and function. Reported CD247-deficient patients showed severe immunodeficiency despite the presence of two populations of peripheral T cells, most with low TCR levels carrying the germline variant and a few with higher TCR levels due to somatic reversion. However, the revertant T cells remained a minority and did not improve the patients' clinical status.
Purpose: To compare the capability of somatic revertant variants of CD247 germline changes (p.M1T and p.Q70X) to restore TCR expression and function.
Methods: CD247 wild-type (WT) and p.Q70L/W/Y somatic variants were individually introduced in CD247-deficient mouse (MA5.8), human mutant (PM1T), and CRISPR/Cas9-generated Jurkat (ZKO) T cell lines by nucleofection or transduction.
Results: MA5.8 mouse T cells do not accurately model human CD247 deficiencies, as Q70X restores TCR expression in MA5.8 but not in human cells. In human cell models, all somatic revertant variants restored TCR expression with varying degrees (WT = Q70L > Q70W > Q70Y). In contrast, TCR-induced activation events, such as CD69/CD25 upregulation, showed a different hierarchy (WT = Q70W > Q70L = Q70Y). Furthermore, all CD247 somatic variants failed to induce TCR-mediated ZAP70 tyrosine phosphorylation compared to WT.
Conclusion: Somatic reversions, such as those detected in patients with pathogenic CD247 germinal changes, display a discordant capability to rescue TCR expression versus function. These findings shed light on the role of CD247 in TCR expression and function during human T cell development, with implications for immunodeficiencies, as well as for the biological consequences of CD247 somatic mosaicism.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Clinical Immunology publishes impactful papers in the realm of human immunology, delving into the diagnosis, pathogenesis, prognosis, or treatment of human diseases. The journal places particular emphasis on primary immunodeficiencies and related diseases, encompassing inborn errors of immunity in a broad sense, their underlying genotypes, and diverse phenotypes. These phenotypes include infection, malignancy, allergy, auto-inflammation, and autoimmunity. We welcome a broad spectrum of studies in this domain, spanning genetic discovery, clinical description, immunologic assessment, diagnostic approaches, prognosis evaluation, and treatment interventions. Case reports are considered if they are genuinely original and accompanied by a concise review of the relevant medical literature, illustrating how the novel case study advances the field. The instructions to authors provide detailed guidance on the four categories of papers accepted by the journal.