1. Academic Validation
  2. Functional characterization of the human dendritic cell immunodeficiency associated with the IRF8(K108E) mutation

Functional characterization of the human dendritic cell immunodeficiency associated with the IRF8(K108E) mutation

  • Blood. 2014 Sep 18;124(12):1894-904. doi: 10.1182/blood-2014-04-570879.
Sandra Salem 1 David Langlais François Lefebvre Guillaume Bourque Venetia Bigley Muzz Haniffa Jean-Laurent Casanova David Burk Albert Berghuis Karina M Butler Timothy Ronan Leahy Sophie Hambleton Philippe Gros
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Biochemistry McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada
Abstract

We have previously reported on a unique patient in whom homozygosity for a mutation at IRF8 (IRF8(K108E)) causes a severe immunodeficiency. Laboratory evaluation revealed a highly unusual myeloid compartment, remarkable for the complete absence of CD141 and CD161 monocytes, absence of CD11c1 conventional dendritic cells (DCs) and CD11c1/CD1231 plasmacytoid DCs, and striking granulocytic hyperplasia. The patient initially presented with severe disseminated mycobacterial and mucocutaneous Fungal infections and was ultimately cured by cord blood transplant. Sequencing RNA from the IRF8(K108E) patient's primary blood cells prior to transplant shows not only depletion of IRF8-bound and IRF8-regulated transcriptional targets, in keeping with the distorted composition of the myeloid compartment, but also a paucity of transcripts associated with activated CD41 and CD81 T lymphocytes. This suggests that T cells reared in the absence of a functional antigen-presenting compartment in IRF8(K108E) are anergic. Biochemical characterization of the IRF8(K108E) mutant in vitro shows that loss of the positively charged side chain at K108 causes loss of nuclear localization and loss of transcriptional activity, which is concomitant with decreased protein stability, increased ubiquitination, increased small ubiquitin-like modification, and enhanced proteasomal degradation. These findings provide functional insight into the molecular basis of immunodeficiency associated with loss of IRF8.

Figures