Heterozygous TLR3 Mutation in Patients with Hantavirus Encephalitis.
Terhi PartanenJie ChenJohanna LehtonenOuti KuisminHarri RusanenOlli VapalahtiAntti VaheriVeli-Jukka AnttilaMichaela BodeNina HautalaTytti VuorinenVirpi GlumoffMinna KraatariPirjo ÅströmJanna SaarelaHeikki KaumaLazaro LorenzoJean-Laurent CasanovaShen-Ying ZhangMikko SeppänenTimo HautalaPublished in: Journal of clinical immunology (2020)
Puumala hantavirus (PUUV) hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) is common in Northern Europe; this infection is usually self-limited and severe complications are uncommon. PUUV and other hantaviruses, however, can rarely cause encephalitis. The pathogenesis of these rare and severe events is unknown. In this study, we explored the possibility that genetic defects in innate anti-viral immunity, as analogous to Toll-like receptor 3 (TLR3) mutations seen in HSV-1 encephalitis, may explain PUUV encephalitis. We completed exome sequencing of seven adult patients with encephalitis or encephalomyelitis during acute PUUV infection. We found heterozygosity for the TLR3 p.L742F novel variant in two of the seven unrelated patients (29%, p = 0.0195). TLR3-deficient P2.1 fibrosarcoma cell line and SV40-immortalized fibroblasts (SV40-fibroblasts) from patient skin expressing mutant or wild-type TLR3 were tested functionally. The TLR3 p.L742F allele displayed low poly(I:C)-stimulated cytokine induction when expressed in P2.1 cells. SV40-fibroblasts from three healthy controls produced increasing levels of IFN-λ and IL-6 after 24 h of stimulation with increasing concentrations of poly(I:C), whereas the production of the cytokines was impaired in TLR3 L742F/WT patient SV40-fibroblasts. Heterozygous TLR3 mutation may underlie not only HSV-1 encephalitis but also PUUV hantavirus encephalitis. Such possibility should be further explored in encephalitis caused by these and other hantaviruses.
Keyphrases
- toll like receptor
- immune response
- inflammatory response
- nuclear factor
- wild type
- early onset
- case report
- end stage renal disease
- extracellular matrix
- gene expression
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- oxidative stress
- liver failure
- single cell
- cell proliferation
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- hepatitis b virus
- risk factors
- cord blood