1. An activating NLRC4 inflammasome mutation causes autoinflammation with recurrent macrophage activation syndrome.
- Author
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Canna, Scott W, Gouni, Sushanth, Villarino, Alejandro V, O'Shea, John J, Benseler, Susanne, Grom, Alexei, Laxer, Ronald M, de Jesus, Adriana A, Marrero, Bernadette, Liu, Yin, Kim, Hanna, Huang, Yan, Goldbach-Mansky, Raphaela, Brooks, Stephen R, Deng, Zuoming, DiMattia, Michael A, Zaal, Kristien J M, Sanchez, Gina A Montealegre, Chapelle, Dawn, and Plass, Nicole
- Subjects
INFLAMMATION ,MACROPHAGE activation syndrome ,PATHOGENIC microorganisms ,INTERLEUKINS ,CRYOPYRIN-associated periodic syndromes ,MISSENSE mutation - Abstract
Inflammasomes are innate immune sensors that respond to pathogen- and damage-associated signals with caspase-1 activation, interleukin (IL)-1β and IL-18 secretion, and macrophage pyroptosis. The discovery that dominant gain-of-function mutations in NLRP3 cause the cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes (CAPS) and trigger spontaneous inflammasome activation and IL-1β oversecretion led to successful treatment with IL-1-blocking agents. Herein we report a de novo missense mutation (c.1009A>T, encoding p.Thr337Ser) affecting the nucleotide-binding domain of the inflammasome component NLRC4 that causes early-onset recurrent fever flares and macrophage activation syndrome (MAS). Functional analyses demonstrated spontaneous inflammasome formation and production of the inflammasome-dependent cytokines IL-1β and IL-18, with the latter exceeding the levels seen in CAPS. The NLRC4 mutation caused constitutive caspase-1 cleavage in cells transduced with mutant NLRC4 and increased production of IL-18 in both patient-derived and mutant NLRC4-transduced macrophages. Thus, we describe a new monoallelic inflammasome defect that expands the monogenic autoinflammatory disease spectrum to include MAS and suggests new targets for therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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