725 results match your criteria: "Necker Hospital for Sick Children[Affiliation]"

IRAK1 Duplication in MECP2 Duplication Syndrome Does Not Increase Canonical NF-κB-Induced Inflammation.

J Clin Immunol

February 2023

Department of Pediatric Respiratory Medicine, Immunology and Critical Care Medicine, Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, corporate member of Freie Universität Berlin, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, and Berlin Institute of Health (BIH), Berlin, Germany.

Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on patients with MECP2/IRAK1 duplication syndrome, who face severe recurrent infections and excessive inflammation, especially in respiratory conditions.
  • Researchers investigated the role of IRAK1 overexpression in NF-κB signaling, a pathway connected to inflammation, by examining cytokine production and related cellular processes in various patient samples.
  • Results indicated that both patients and healthy controls exhibited similar inflammatory responses and IRAK1 activity, suggesting that suppressing the NF-κB pathway may not provide benefit for these patients.
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Fulminant Viral Hepatitis in Two Siblings with Inherited IL-10RB Deficiency.

J Clin Immunol

February 2023

Laboratory of Human Genetics of Infectious Diseases, Necker Branch, INSERM U1163, Necker Hospital for Sick Children, Paris, France.

Fulminant viral hepatitis (FVH) caused by hepatitis A virus (HAV) is a life-threatening disease that typically strikes otherwise healthy individuals. The only known genetic etiology of FVH is inherited IL-18BP deficiency, which unleashes IL-18-dependent lymphocyte cytotoxicity and IFN-γ production. We studied two siblings who died from a combination of early-onset inflammatory bowel disease (EOIBD) and FVH due to HAV.

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Phage immunoprecipitation sequencing (PhIP-seq) allows for unbiased, proteome-wide autoantibody discovery across a variety of disease settings, with identification of disease-specific autoantigens providing new insight into previously poorly understood forms of immune dysregulation. Despite several successful implementations of PhIP-seq for autoantigen discovery, including our previous work (Vazquez et al., 2020), current protocols are inherently difficult to scale to accommodate large cohorts of cases and importantly, healthy controls.

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Diminution of STING Expression in the Blood of Patients with Severe or Critical COVID-19 Pneumonia.

Int Arch Allergy Immunol

January 2023

Clinical Tuberculosis and Epidemiology Research Center, National Research Institute of Tuberculosis and Lung Diseases (NRITLD), Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.

Introduction: Cytokine storm and critical COVID-19 pneumonia are caused in at least 10% of patients by inborn errors of or auto-Abs to type I IFNs. The pathogenesis of life-threatening COVID-19 pneumonia in other patients remains unknown.

Methods: This study was conducted at Masih Daneshvari Hospital, Tehran, Iran.

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Delayed Diagnosis of Chronic Necrotizing Granulomatous Skin Lesions due to TAP2 Deficiency.

J Clin Immunol

January 2023

Department of Clinical Immunology and Infectious Diseases, National Research Institute of Tuberculosis and Lung Diseases, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.

Major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) deficiency, also known as bare lymphocyte syndrome type 1 (BLS-1), is a rare autosomal recessively inherited immunodeficiency disorder with remarkable clinical and biological heterogeneity. Transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) is a member of the ATP-binding cassette superfamily of transporters and consists of two subunits, TAP1 or TAP2. Any defect resulting from a mutation or deletion of these two subunits may adversely affect the peptide translocation in the endoplasmic reticulum, which is an important process for properly assembling MHC-I molecules.

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Decoding the Human Genetic and Immunological Basis of COVID-19 mRNA Vaccine-Induced Myocarditis.

J Clin Immunol

October 2022

Department of Pediatrics, Section of Allergy and Immunology, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, School of Medicine, Children's Hospital Colorado, Aurora, CO, USA.

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The 2022 Update of IUIS Phenotypical Classification for Human Inborn Errors of Immunity.

J Clin Immunol

October 2022

Department of Immunology and Microbiology, Laboratory for Inborn Errors of Immunity, Department of Pediatrics, University Hospitals Leuven and KU Leuven, 3000, Louvain, EU, Belgium.

The International Union of Immunological Societies (IUIS) expert committee (EC) on Inborn Errors of Immunity (IEI) reports here the 2022 updated phenotypic classification, which accompanies and complements the most-recent genotypic classification. This phenotypic classification is aimed for clinicians at the bedside and focuses on clinical features and laboratory phenotypes of specific IEI. In this classification, 485 IEI underlying phenotypes as diverse as infection, malignancy, allergy, auto-immunity and auto-inflammation are described, including 55 novel monogenic defects and 1 autoimmune phenocopy.

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Purpose: Janus kinase-1 (JAK1) tyrosine kinase mediates signaling from multiple cytokine receptors, including interferon alpha/beta and gamma (IFN-α/β and IFN-γ), which are important for viral and mycobacterial protection respectively. We previously reported autosomal recessive (AR) hypomorphic mutations in a patient with recurrent atypical mycobacterial infections and relatively minor viral infections. This study tests the impact of partial JAK1 deficiency on cellular responses to IFNs and pathogen control.

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Purpose: Hypogammaglobulinemia in a context of lymphoma is usually considered as secondary and prior lymphoma remains an exclusion criterion for a common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) diagnosis. We hypothesized that lymphoma could be the revealing symptom of an underlying primary immunodeficiency (PID), challenging the distinction between primary and secondary hypogammaglobulinemia.

Methods: Within a French cohort of adult patients with hypogammaglobulinemia, patients who developed a lymphoma either during follow-up or before the diagnosis of hypogammaglobulinemia were identified.

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Break down the barriers of auto-inflammation: How to deal with a monogenic auto-inflammatory disease and immuno-haematological features in 2022?

Immunology

January 2023

Internal Medicine Department, APHP, Tenon Hospital, National Reference Center for Autoinflammatory Diseases and Inflammatory Amyloidosis (CEREMAIA), Sorbonne University, Paris, France.

In the past few years, the spectrum of monogenic systemic auto-inflammatory diseases (MSAID) has widely expanded beyond the typical recurrent fever. Immuno-haematological features, as cytopenias, hypogammaglobulinemia, hypereosinophilia, lymphoproliferation and immunodeficiency, have been described in association of several MSAID. The objective of this review was to describe these particular MSAID.

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Chagas disease (CD), caused by the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, affects 8 million people, and around 1/3 develop chronic cardiac (CCC) or digestive disease (megaesophagus/megacolon), while the majority remain asymptomatic, in the indeterminate form of Chagas disease (ASY). Most CCC cases in families with multiple Chagas disease patients carry damaging mutations in mitochondrial genes. We searched for exonic mutations associated to chagasic megaesophagus (CME) in genes essential to mitochondrial processes.

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EGFR Signaling Is Overactive in Pachyonychia Congenita: Effective Treatment with Oral Erlotinib.

J Invest Dermatol

February 2023

INSERM UMR 1163, Laboratory of Genetic Skin Diseases, Imagine Institute, Paris, France; University of Paris, Paris, France; Department of Genetics, Necker Hospital for Sick Children. Assistance Publique des Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP), Paris, France. Electronic address:

Pachyonychia congenita (PC) is a rare keratinizing disorder characterized by painful palmoplantar keratoderma for which there is no standard current treatment. PC is caused by dominant mutations in keratin (K) K6A, K6B, K6C, K16, or K17 genes involved in stress, wound healing, and epidermal barrier formation. Mechanisms leading to pain and painful palmoplantar keratoderma in PC remain elusive.

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Genetic and immunologic evaluation of children with inborn errors of immunity and severe or critical COVID-19.

J Allergy Clin Immunol

November 2022

Department of Biosciences and Nutrition, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Huddinge, Sweden. Electronic address:

Background: Most severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)-infected individuals are asymptomatic or only exhibit mild disease. In about 10% of cases, the infection leads to hypoxemic pneumonia, although it is much more rare in children.

Objective: We evaluated 31 young patients aged 0.

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Dipeptidyl peptidase 9 (DPP9) is a direct inhibitor of NLRP1, but how it affects inflammasome regulation in vivo is not yet established. Here, we report three families with immune-associated defects, poor growth, pancytopenia, and skin pigmentation abnormalities that segregate with biallelic rare variants. Using patient-derived primary cells and biochemical assays, these variants were shown to behave as hypomorphic or knockout alleles that failed to repress NLRP1.

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Autoantibodies against type I IFNs in patients with critical influenza pneumonia.

J Exp Med

November 2022

St. Giles Laboratory of Human Genetics of Infectious Diseases, Rockefeller Branch, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY.

Autoantibodies neutralizing type I interferons (IFNs) can underlie critical COVID-19 pneumonia and yellow fever vaccine disease. We report here on 13 patients harboring autoantibodies neutralizing IFN-α2 alone (five patients) or with IFN-ω (eight patients) from a cohort of 279 patients (4.7%) aged 6-73 yr with critical influenza pneumonia.

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The Fontan operation represents the last of multiple steps that are offered a wide range of congenital cardiac lesions with a single ventricle (SV) physiology. Nowadays this surgical program consists of a total cavopulmonary connection (TCPC), by anastomosing systemic veins to the pulmonary arteries (PAs), excluding the right-sided circulation from the heart. As a result of imaging, surgical, percutaneous, and critical care improvements, survival in this population has steadily increased.

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Human cells homozygous for rare loss-of-expression (LOE) TYK2 alleles have impaired, but not abolished, cellular responses to IFN-α/β (underlying viral diseases in the patients) and to IL-12 and IL-23 (underlying mycobacterial diseases). Cells homozygous for the common P1104A TYK2 allele have selectively impaired responses to IL-23 (underlying isolated mycobacterial disease). We report three new forms of TYK2 deficiency in six patients from five families homozygous for rare TYK2 alleles (R864C, G996R, G634E, or G1010D) or compound heterozygous for P1104A and a rare allele (A928V).

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Article Synopsis
  • Mendelian susceptibility to mycobacterial disease (MSMD) is a rare genetic disorder that weakens the immune response to mycobacteria and can lead to severe infections, even in healthy individuals.
  • A study in Mexico reviewed 22 MSMD patients from 2006 to 2021, revealing that 70% developed infections after receiving the BCG vaccine, with some also suffering from other bacterial and fungal infections.
  • Genetic analysis showed 13 variants in genes associated with MSMD, primarily in IL12RB1, indicating that deficiencies in this gene are the main cause of the condition in the patients studied.
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From rare disorders of immunity to common determinants of infection: Following the mechanistic thread.

Cell

August 2022

St Giles Laboratory of Human Genetics of Infectious Diseases, Rockefeller Branch, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY, USA; Laboratory of Human Genetics of Infectious Diseases, Necker Branch, INSERM, Necker Hospital for Sick Children, Paris, France; Paris Cité University, Imagine Institute, Paris, France.

The immense interindividual clinical variability during any infection is a long-standing enigma. Inborn errors of IFN-γ and IFN-α/β immunity underlying rare infections with weakly virulent mycobacteria and seasonal influenza virus have inspired studies of two common infections: tuberculosis and COVID-19. A TYK2 genotype impairing IFN-γ production accounts for about 1% of tuberculosis cases, and autoantibodies neutralizing IFN-α/β account for about 15% of critical COVID-19 cases.

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Objectives: Type-I interferons (IFNs-I) have potent antiviral effects. IFNs-I are also overproduced in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Autoantibodies (AAbs) neutralising IFN-α, IFN-β and/or IFN-ω subtypes are strong determinants of hypoxemic COVID-19 pneumonia, but their impact on inflammation remains unknown.

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Innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) include cytotoxic natural killer cells and distinct groups of cytokine-producing innate helper cells which participate in immune defense and promote tissue homeostasis. Circulating human ILC precursors (ILCP) able to generate all canonical ILC subsets via multi-potent or uni-potent intermediates according to our previous work. Here we show potential cooperative roles for the Notch and IL-23 signaling pathways for human ILC differentiation from blood ILCP using single cell cloning analyses and validate these findings in patient samples with rare genetic deficiencies in IL12RB1 and RORC.

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Rare diseases represent a diagnostic challenge due to their number, variety of clinical phenomena, and possibility of a simultaneous presence of two or more diseases. An illustration of this challenge is an occurrence of a late diagnosis of a proband initially diagnosed with West syndrome, later revealed to be caused by Incontinentia pigmenti (IP). Furthermore, 20 years later, it was discovered that the proband was also a carrier of a heterozygous gene mutation.

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Article Synopsis
  • High expression of the transcription factor T-bet is linked to a unique type of B cell called "age-associated B cells" (ABCs) in mice, and T-bet deficiency can lead to fewer ABCs and weakened immune responses.
  • A patient with T-bet deficiency showed normal overall immune responses but had an unusual pattern of antibody class switching and distinct B cell characteristics, similar to ABCs in mice.
  • T-bet plays a crucial role in the development of a specific subset of human B cells, impacting their differentiation and genetic programming, while being less critical for maintaining long-term effective humoral immunity.
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Article Synopsis
  • Breakthrough cases of severe COVID-19 in vaccinated individuals may be linked to weak or inadequate antibody responses, particularly among those already at risk.
  • A study of 48 vaccinated individuals with hypoxemic COVID-19 pneumonia found that about 24% had auto-antibodies (auto-Abs) that neutralized type I interferons, which are essential for the immune response.
  • The presence of these auto-Abs suggests that even with normal antibody responses to the vaccine, some individuals can still suffer severe effects from COVID-19, indicating a need for more targeted strategies for vulnerable populations.
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Article Synopsis
  • A study evaluated the prevalence of autoantibodies (aAbs) and neutralizing autoantibodies (naAbs) to type I interferons in Japanese COVID-19 patients and a healthy control group.
  • Among uninfected individuals in the general Japanese population, only 0.087% had aAbs, whereas 10.6% of critically ill patients had naAbs.
  • The presence of naAbs was significantly linked to critical illness, older age, and male sex, indicating a greater risk for severe COVID-19 in those with pre-existing naAbs.
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