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IL-12Rβ1 deficiency in two of fifty children with severe tuberculosis from Iran, Morocco, and Turkey.

Authors :
Stéphanie Boisson-Dupuis
Jamila El Baghdadi
Nima Parvaneh
Aziz Bousfiha
Jacinta Bustamante
Jacqueline Feinberg
Arina Samarina
Audrey V Grant
Lucile Janniere
Naima El Hafidi
Amal Hassani
Daniel Nolan
Jilali Najib
Yildiz Camcioglu
Nevin Hatipoglu
Cigdem Aydogmus
Gonul Tanir
Caner Aytekin
Melike Keser
Ayper Somer
Guside Aksu
Necil Kutukculer
Davood Mansouri
Alireza Mahdaviani
Setareh Mamishi
Alexandre Alcais
Laurent Abel
Jean-Laurent Casanova
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 6, Iss 4, p e18524 (2011)
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2011.

Abstract

In the last decade, autosomal recessive IL-12Rβ1 deficiency has been diagnosed in four children with severe tuberculosis from three unrelated families from Morocco, Spain, and Turkey, providing proof-of-principle that tuberculosis in otherwise healthy children may result from single-gene inborn errors of immunity. We aimed to estimate the fraction of children developing severe tuberculosis due to IL-12Rβ1 deficiency in areas endemic for tuberculosis and where parental consanguinity is common.We searched for IL12RB1 mutations in a series of 50 children from Iran, Morocco, and Turkey. All children had established severe pulmonary and/or disseminated tuberculosis requiring hospitalization and were otherwise normally resistant to weakly virulent BCG vaccines and environmental mycobacteria. In one child from Iran and another from Morocco, homozygosity for loss-of-function IL12RB1 alleles was documented, resulting in complete IL-12Rβ1 deficiency. Despite the small sample studied, our findings suggest that IL-12Rβ1 deficiency is not a very rare cause of pediatric tuberculosis in these countries, where it should be considered in selected children with severe disease.This finding may have important medical implications, as recombinant IFN-γ is an effective treatment for mycobacterial infections in IL-12Rβ1-deficient patients. It also provides additional support for the view that severe tuberculosis in childhood may result from a collection of single-gene inborn errors of immunity.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
6
Issue :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.371611f76da547a09747d5270c01ce63
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0018524