A case of aberrant CD8 T cell –restricted IL-7 signaling with a Janus kinase 3 defect–associated atypical severe combined immunodeficiency

AbstractSevere combined immunodeficiency (SCID) disorders compromise lymphocyte numbers and/or function. One subset of SCID typically affects T cell and Natural Killer (NK) cell development in tandem (T−B+NK−) due to mutations arising in the genes encoding the common γ chain or Janus Kinase 3 (JAK3). In rare circumstances, mutations in theJAK3 gene have been reported to cause atypical SCID that selectively affects T cells (T−B+NK+). Here we describe a case involving a female infant who was referred to our institution on day nine of life following an abnormal newborn screen result for T−SCID. Immunological assessments revealed a T−B+NK+ phenotype and molecular analyses, including whole exome sequencing, identified compound heterozygous JAK3 variants (R117C and E658K). Pre-transplant phosflow analyses revealed a persistent IL-7 signaling defect, based on phospho-STAT5 measurements, only in CD8 but not CD4 T cells. Intriguingly, phospho-STAT5 signals in response to IL-2 stimulation were not affected in either CD4 or CD8 T cells. The pre-transplant clinical course was unremarkable, and the patient received a cord-blood stem cell transplant on day 716 of life. Post-transplant monitoring revealed that despite normalization of lymphocyte counts, the CD8 T cell-restricted IL-7 signaling defect was still evident at day 627 post-transplant (phospho-STAT5 signal in CD8 T cells was>  60% reduced compared with CD4 T cells). The post-transplant clinical course has also been...
Source: Immunologic Research - Category: Allergy & Immunology Source Type: research