Human PI3Kγ deficiency and its microbiota-dependent mouse model reveal immunodeficiency and tissue immunopathology.
Andrew J TakedaTimothy J MaherYu ZhangStephen M LanahanMolly L BucklinSusan R ComptonPaul M TylerWilliam A ComrieMakoto MatsudaKenneth N OlivierStefania PittalugaJoshua J McElweeDebra A Long PrielDouglas B KuhnsRoger L WilliamsPeter J MustilloMatthias P WymannV Koneti RaoCarrie L LucasPublished in: Nature communications (2019)
Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-gamma (PI3Kγ) is highly expressed in leukocytes and is an attractive drug target for immune modulation. Different experimental systems have led to conflicting conclusions regarding inflammatory and anti-inflammatory functions of PI3Kγ. Here, we report a human patient with bi-allelic, loss-of-function mutations in PIK3CG resulting in absence of the p110γ catalytic subunit of PI3Kγ. She has a history of childhood-onset antibody defects, cytopenias, and T lymphocytic pneumonitis and colitis, with reduced peripheral blood memory B, memory CD8+ T, and regulatory T cells and increased CXCR3+ tissue-homing CD4 T cells. PI3Kγ-deficient macrophages and monocytes produce elevated inflammatory IL-12 and IL-23 in a GSK3α/β-dependent manner upon TLR stimulation. Pik3cg-deficient mice recapitulate major features of human disease after exposure to natural microbiota through co-housing with pet-store mice. Together, our results emphasize the physiological importance of PI3Kγ in restraining inflammation and promoting appropriate adaptive immune responses in both humans and mice.
Keyphrases
- peripheral blood
- endothelial cells
- regulatory t cells
- immune response
- mouse model
- oxidative stress
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- toll like receptor
- working memory
- anti inflammatory
- pluripotent stem cells
- type diabetes
- signaling pathway
- protein kinase
- metabolic syndrome
- computed tomography
- gene expression
- rheumatoid arthritis
- high fat diet induced
- tyrosine kinase
- adipose tissue
- nuclear factor
- case report
- positron emission tomography
- early life
- systemic sclerosis
- ulcerative colitis