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Mouse Model of a Human STAT4 Point Mutation That Predisposes to Disseminated Coccidiomycosis.

Daniel A PowellAmy P HsuLisa F ShubitzChristine D ButkiewiczHilary MoaleHien T TrinhThomas DoetschmanTeodora G GeorgievaDakota M ReinartzJustin E WilsonMarc J OrbachSteven M HollandJohn N GalgianiJeffrey A Frelinger
Published in: ImmunoHorizons (2022)
STAT4 plays a critical role in the generation of both innate and adaptive immune responses. In the absence of STAT4, Th1 responses, critical for resistance to fungal disease, do not occur. Infection with the dimorphic fungus, Coccidioides , is a major cause of community-acquired pneumonia in the endemic regions of Arizona and California. In some people and often for unknown reasons, coccidioidal infection results in hematogenous dissemination and progressive disease rather than the typical self-limited pneumonia. Members of three generations in a family developed disseminated coccidioidomycosis, prompting genetic investigation. All affected family members had a single heterozygous base change in STAT4 , c.1877A>G, causing substitution of glycine for glutamate at AA626 ( STAT4 E626G/+ ). A knockin mouse, heterozygous for the substitution, developed more severe experimental coccidioidomycosis than did wild-type mice. Stat4 E626G/+ T cells were deficient in production of IFN-γ after anti-CD3/CD28 stimulation. Spleen cells from Stat4 E626G mice showed defective responses to IL-12/IL-18 stimulation in vitro. In vivo, early postinfection, mutant Stat4 E626G/+ mice failed to produce IFN-γ and related cytokines in the lung and to accumulate activated adaptive immune cells in mediastinal lymph nodes. Therefore, defective early induction of IFN-γ and adaptive responses by STAT4 prevents normal control of coccidioidomycosis in both mice and humans.
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