Variable Syndromic Immunodeficiency in Patients with Biallelic PRIM1 Mutations.
Vasil ToskovPetra Kaiser-LabuschMin Ae Lee-Kirschnull nullStephan EhlOliver WegehauptPublished in: Journal of clinical immunology (2024)
Mutations in genes of the DNA polymerase complex have been linked to impaired immunological function next to distinct syndromic features. Biallelic mutations in PRIM1 are associated with a primordial dwarfism syndrome with variable hypogammaglobulinemia. The disease is mostly lethal in infancy due to pulmonary infections as well as hepatic cirrhosis. We studied 3 novel patients with PRIM1-deficiency with a focus on immunological consequences. All three shared dysmorphic features including a prominent forehead, triangular face and bilateral cryptorchidism. P1 carried the novel homozygous PRIM1 splice variant c.103+2T>G, allowing residual protein expression and associated with a mild clinical phenotype. P2 and P3 carried the known homozygous variant c.638+36C>G and died in infancy. Paradoxically, B cell lymphopenia was most pronounced in P1. No other significant lymphocyte abnormalities were detected. Interestingly, all 3 patients showed variable, but intermittently excessive Type I interferon signatures. In summary, the B-cell deficiency in PRIM1-deficiency is markedly variable and the severity of syndromic manifestations is not predictive of the immunological phenotype. We highlight a potential contribution of pathological type I interferon activation to disease pathogenesis which warrants further investigations.
Keyphrases
- intellectual disability
- autism spectrum disorder
- end stage renal disease
- weight gain
- newly diagnosed
- genome wide
- replacement therapy
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- case report
- pulmonary hypertension
- peritoneal dialysis
- body mass index
- single molecule
- transcription factor
- patient reported
- smoking cessation
- botulinum toxin
- genome wide identification