Combined immunodeficiency and Epstein-Barr virus–induced B cell malignancy in humans with inherited CD70 deficiency

Hassan Abolhassani(Karolinska University Hospital), Emily S.J. Edwards(Garvan Institute of Medical Research), Aydan İkincioğulları(Ankara University), Huie Jing(National Institutes of Health), Stephan Borte(Klinikum St. Georg), Marcus Buggert(Karolinska University Hospital), Likun Du(Karolinska University Hospital), Mami Matsuda‐Lennikov(National Institutes of Health), Rosa Romano(Karolinska University Hospital), Rozina Caridha(Karolinska University Hospital), Sangeeta Bade(National Institutes of Health), Yu Zhang(National Institutes of Health), Juliet Frederiksen(Technical University of Denmark), Mingyan Fang(Karolinska University Hospital), Sevgi Köstel Bal(Ankara University), Şule Haskoloğlu(Ankara University), Figen Doğu(Ankara University), Nurdan Taçyıldız(Ankara University), Helen Matthews(National Institutes of Health), Joshua McElwee(Merck & Co., Inc., Rahway, NJ, USA (United States)), Emma Gostick(Cardiff University), David A. Price(National Institutes of Health), Umaimainthan Palendira(The University of Sydney), Asghar Aghamohammadi(Universal Scientific Education and Research Network), Bertrand Boisson(Inserm), Nima Rezaei(Universal Scientific Education and Research Network), Annika C. Karlsson(Karolinska University Hospital), Michael J. Lenardo(National Institutes of Health), Jean‐Laurent Casanova(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Lennart Hammarström(Karolinska University Hospital), Stuart G. Tangye(Garvan Institute of Medical Research), Helen C. Su(National Institutes of Health), Qiang Pan‐Hammarström(Karolinska University Hospital)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
December 23, 2016
Cited by 151Open Access
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Abstract

In this study, we describe four patients from two unrelated families of different ethnicities with a primary immunodeficiency, predominantly manifesting as susceptibility to Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)–related diseases. Three patients presented with EBV-associated Hodgkin’s lymphoma and hypogammaglobulinemia; one also had severe varicella infection. The fourth had viral encephalitis during infancy. Homozygous frameshift or in-frame deletions in CD70 in these patients abolished either CD70 surface expression or binding to its cognate receptor CD27. Blood lymphocyte numbers were normal, but the proportions of memory B cells and EBV-specific effector memory CD8+ T cells were reduced. Furthermore, although T cell proliferation was normal, in vitro–generated EBV-specific cytotoxic T cell activity was reduced because of CD70 deficiency. This reflected impaired activation by, rather than effects during killing of, EBV-transformed B cells. Notably, expression of 2B4 and NKG2D, receptors implicated in controlling EBV infection, on memory CD8+ T cells from CD70-deficient individuals was reduced, consistent with their impaired killing of EBV-infected cells. Thus, autosomal recessive CD70 deficiency is a novel cause of combined immunodeficiency and EBV-associated diseases, reminiscent of inherited CD27 deficiency. Overall, human CD70–CD27 interactions therefore play a nonredundant role in T and B cell–mediated immunity, especially for protection against EBV and humoral immunity.


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