ABSTRACT
Intestinal mucus forms the first line of defense against bacterial invasion while providing nutrition to support microbial symbiosis. How the host controls mucus barrier integrity and commensalism is unclear. We show that terminal sialylation of glycans on intestinal mucus by ST6GALNAC1 (ST6), the dominant sialyltransferase specifically expressed in goblet cells and induced by microbial pathogen-associated molecular patterns, is essential for mucus integrity and protecting against excessive bacterial proteolytic degradation. Glycoproteomic profiling and biochemical analysis of ST6 mutations identified in patients show that decreased sialylation causes defective mucus proteins and congenital inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Mice harboring a patient ST6 mutation have compromised mucus barriers, dysbiosis, and susceptibility to intestinal inflammation. Based on our understanding of the ST6 regulatory network, we show that treatment with sialylated mucin or a Foxo3 inhibitor can ameliorate IBD.
Subject(s)
Gastrointestinal Microbiome , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases , Sialyltransferases/genetics , Animals , Homeostasis , Humans , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/genetics , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/metabolism , Intestinal Mucosa/metabolism , Intestinal Mucosa/microbiology , Mice , Mucus/metabolism , Sialyltransferases/metabolism , SymbiosisABSTRACT
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: There is a subset of intestinal failure patients with associated chronic intestinal inflammation resembling inflammatory bowel disease. This study aimed to evaluate factors associated with chronic intestinal inflammation in pediatric intestinal failure. METHODS: This was a single-center retrospective case-control study of children <18 years old with intestinal failure. Cases were defined by abnormal amounts of chronic intestinal inflammation on biopsies. Children with diversion colitis, eosinophilic colitis, or isolated anastomotic ulceration were excluded. Cases were matched 1:2 to intestinal failure controls based on sex, etiology of intestinal failure, and duration of intestinal failure. Multivariable conditional logistic regression was used to compare clinical factors between cases and controls, accounting for clustering within matched sets. A subgroup analysis was performed assessing factors associated with escalation of anti-inflammatory therapy. RESULTS: Thirty cases were identified and matched to 60 controls. On univariate analysis, longer parenteral nutrition (PN) duration (1677 vs 834 days, P = 0.03), current PN use (33.3% vs 20.0%, P = 0.037), and culture-proven bacterial overgrowth (53.3% vs 31.7%, P = 0.05) were associated with chronic intestinal inflammation. On multivariable analysis, no variable reached statistical significance. On subgroup analysis, duration of intestinal failure, location of inflammation, and worst degree of inflammation on histology were associated with escalation of therapy. CONCLUSIONS: PN dependence and intestinal dysbiosis are associated with chronic intestinal inflammation in children with intestinal failure. Severity of inflammation is associated with escalation of therapy. Further analysis is needed to assess these associations and the efficacy of treatments in this population.
Subject(s)
Colitis , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases , Intestinal Diseases , Intestinal Failure , Short Bowel Syndrome , Child , Humans , Adolescent , Case-Control Studies , Retrospective Studies , Intestinal Diseases/complications , Intestinal Diseases/therapy , Inflammation/complications , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/complications , Short Bowel Syndrome/therapyABSTRACT
Very early onset inflammatory bowel disease (VEO-IBD) represents a diagnostic and treatment challenge. Here we present a case of VEO-IBD secondary to a mutation in BIRC4 gene, which encodes X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis protein (XIAP), in a 17-month-old boy with severe failure to thrive, intractable diarrhea, and hepatosplenomegaly. Endoscopy and histology identified only mild duodenitis and ileitis, but severe pancolitis with crypt abscesses and epithelium apoptosis. Minimal improvement in symptoms was achieved with total parenteral nutrition (TPN), intravenous (IV) corticosteroids, and tacrolimus, whereas induction and maintenance therapy with adalimumab led to complete remission. After 6 months, the patient developed hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis and eventually died due to multisystem organ failure. A review of the literature revealed that some patients with VEO-IBD secondary to XIAP deficiency develop symptoms that are refractory to medical and surgical management, while initial reports suggest that allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), with reduced intensity conditioning, can successfully induce long-lasting remission and may even be curative. We propose that in patients with XIAP deficiency a constellation of symptoms including colitis at an early age, severe failure to thrive, and splenomegaly/hepatosplenomegaly can identify a subgroup of patients at high risk of experiencing medically refractory IBD phenotype and increased mortality. Hematopoietic stem cell transplant should be considered early in these high-risk patients, as it may resolve both their intestinal inflammation and a risk of developing life threatening hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis .
Subject(s)
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/genetics , Lymphohistiocytosis, Hemophagocytic/genetics , X-Linked Inhibitor of Apoptosis Protein/genetics , Fatal Outcome , Humans , Infant , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/therapy , Male , Remission Induction , Risk Factors , X-Linked Inhibitor of Apoptosis Protein/deficiencyABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Efficacy data from adult ulcerative colitis (UC) clinical trials are often extrapolated for pediatric prescribing. Consequently, it is important to understand similarities/differences in pediatric and adult UC. Pediatric UC tends to have more extensive disease at presentation, yet genetic studies have not detected pathways that distinguish the populations, and differences in mucosal gene expression between adult and pediatric UC are not well characterized. METHODS: Using colonic microarray data from a phase 3 trial of golimumab in adult UC (87 UC; 21 healthy), the GSE10616 pediatric dataset (10 UC; 11 healthy), and a phase 1B trial of golimumab in pediatric UC (nâ=â19), UC expression profiles were compared and unique genes were defined as those with significant changes (|FC|>2×, adjusted Pâ<â0.05) in one population, but not the other (|FC|â<â1.2×, adjusted P > 0.05). Pathway and upstream regulator analyses were performed. Profiles by disease extent (extensive [pancolitis] vs limited [left-sided] involvement) were compared within each population. RESULTS: Pediatric and adult disease profiles overlapped substantially, with â¼50% to 75% overlap, depending on the fold-change cutoff used. Conversely, <10% of the disease profiles were unique to each population. Similar canonical pathways were enriched in both datasets. Predicted upstream regulators were also concordant, including lipopolysaccharide, interleukin-1ß, and tumor necrosis factor-α. Expression profiles of extensive UC were indistinguishable from those of patients with limited involvement in each population. CONCLUSIONS: The UC gene expression landscape is shared by adults and children, independent of disease extent. This supports extrapolation of efficacy from adults to children in developing new therapies for UC.
Subject(s)
Antibodies, Monoclonal/therapeutic use , Colitis, Ulcerative/drug therapy , Adolescent , Adult , Age Factors , Aged , Antibodies, Monoclonal/pharmacokinetics , Child , Colitis, Ulcerative/immunology , Female , Gene Expression , Humans , Intestinal Mucosa/immunology , Male , Middle Aged , Young AdultABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Advances in genomics have facilitated the discovery of monogenic disorders in patients with unique gastro-intestinal phenotypes. Syndromic diarrhea, also called tricho-hepato-enteric (THE) syndrome, results from deleterious mutations in SKIV2L or TTC37 genes. The main features of this disorder are intractable diarrhea, abnormal hair, facial dysmorphism, immunodeficiency and liver disease. AIM: To report on a patient with THE syndrome and present the genetic analysis that facilitated diagnosis. METHODS: Whole-exome sequencing (WES) was performed in a 4-month-old female with history of congenital diarrhea and severe failure to thrive but without hair anomalies or dysmorphism. Since the parents were first-degree cousins, the analysis focused on an autosomal recessive model. Sanger sequencing was used to validate suspected variants. Mutated protein structure was modeled to assess the effect of the mutation on protein function. RESULTS: We identified an autosomal recessive C.1891G > A missense mutation (NM_006929) in SKIV2L gene that was previously described only in a compound heterozygous state as causing THE syndrome. The mutation was determined to be deleterious in multiple prediction models. Protein modeling suggested that the mutation has the potential to cause structural destabilization of SKIV2L, either through conformational changes, interference with the protein's packing, or changes at the protein's interface. CONCLUSIONS: THE syndrome can present with a broad range of clinical features in the neonatal period. WES is an important diagnostic tool in patients with congenital diarrhea and can facilitate diagnosis of various diseases presenting with atypical features.
Subject(s)
DNA Helicases/genetics , Diarrhea, Infantile/genetics , Fetal Growth Retardation/genetics , Hair Diseases/genetics , Mutation, Missense , Diarrhea, Infantile/diagnosis , Facies , Female , Fetal Growth Retardation/diagnosis , Genetic Markers , Hair Diseases/diagnosis , Humans , Infant , Exome SequencingABSTRACT
Mice reconstituted with a human immune system provide a tractable in vivo model to assess human immune cell function. To date, reconstitution of murine strains with human hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) from patients with monogenic immune disorders have not been reported. One obstacle precluding the development of immune-disease specific "humanized" mice is that optimal adaptive immune responses in current strains have required implantation of autologous human thymic tissue. To address this issue, we developed a mouse strain that lacks murine major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC II) and instead expresses human leukocyte antigen DR1 (HLA-DR1). These mice displayed improved adaptive immune responses when reconstituted with human HSCs including enhanced T-cell reconstitution, delayed-type hypersensitivity responses, and class-switch recombination. Following immune reconstitution of this novel strain with HSCs from a patient with immune dysregulation, polyendocrinopathy, enteropathy, X-linked (IPEX) syndrome, associated with aberrant FOXP3 function, mice developed a lethal inflammatory disorder with multiorgan involvement and autoantibody production mimicking the pathology seen in affected humans. This humanized mouse model permits in vivo evaluation of immune responses associated with genetically altered HSCs, including primary immunodeficiencies, and should facilitate the study of human immune pathobiology and the development of targeted therapeutics.
Subject(s)
Autoimmunity/immunology , Disease Models, Animal , Forkhead Transcription Factors/immunology , Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes/immunology , Animals , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Flow Cytometry , Forkhead Transcription Factors/deficiency , Forkhead Transcription Factors/genetics , Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Immunophenotyping , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction , Transplantation, HeterologousABSTRACT
Patients with a diverse spectrum of rare genetic disorders can present with inflammatory bowel disease (monogenic IBD). Patients with these disorders often develop symptoms during infancy or early childhood, along with endoscopic or histological features of Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, or IBD unclassified. Defects in interleukin-10 signaling have a Mendelian inheritance pattern with complete penetrance of intestinal inflammation. Several genetic defects that disturb intestinal epithelial barrier function or affect innate and adaptive immune function have incomplete penetrance of the IBD-like phenotype. Several of these monogenic conditions do not respond to conventional therapy and are associated with high morbidity and mortality. Due to the broad spectrum of these extremely rare diseases, a correct diagnosis is frequently a challenge and often delayed. In many cases, these diseases cannot be categorized based on standard histological and immunologic features of IBD. Genetic analysis is required to identify the cause of the disorder and offer the patient appropriate treatment options, which include medical therapy, surgery, or allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. In addition, diagnosis based on genetic analysis can lead to genetic counseling for family members of patients. We describe key intestinal, extraintestinal, and laboratory features of 50 genetic variants associated with IBD-like intestinal inflammation. In addition, we provide approaches for identifying patients likely to have these disorders. We also discuss classic approaches to identify these variants in patients, starting with phenotypic and functional assessments that lead to analysis of candidate genes. As a complementary approach, we discuss parallel genetic screening using next-generation sequencing followed by functional confirmation of genetic defects.
Subject(s)
Colitis, Ulcerative/diagnosis , Colitis, Ulcerative/genetics , Crohn Disease/diagnosis , Crohn Disease/genetics , Genetic Testing , Age of Onset , Colitis, Ulcerative/epidemiology , Colitis, Ulcerative/therapy , Crohn Disease/epidemiology , Crohn Disease/therapy , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Genetic Testing/methods , Humans , Phenotype , Predictive Value of Tests , Prognosis , Risk FactorsABSTRACT
Monogenic causes of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) are increasingly being discovered. To date, much attention has been placed in those resulting from inborn errors of immunity. Therapeutic efforts have been largely focused on offering personalized immune modulation or curative bone marrow transplant for patients with IBD and underlying immune disorders. To date, less emphasis has been placed on monogenic causes of IBD that pertain to impairment of the intestinal epithelial barrier. Here, we provide a comprehensive review of monogenic causes of IBD that result in impaired intestinal epithelial barrier that are categorized into 6 important functions: (1) epithelial cell organization, (2) epithelial cell intrinsic functions, (3) epithelial cell apoptosis and necroptosis, (4) complement activation, (5) epithelial cell signaling, and (6) control of RNA degradation products. We illustrate how impairment of any of these categories can result in IBD. This work reviews the current understanding of the genes involved in maintaining the intestinal barrier, the inheritance patterns that result in dysfunction, features of IBD resulting from these disorders, and pertinent translational work in this field.
A comprehensive review of monogenic causes of IBD that result in impaired intestinal epithelial barrier is detailed, including genes involved in maintaining the intestinal barrier, features of IBD resulting from these disorders, and pertinent translational work in this field.
Subject(s)
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases , Intestinal Mucosa , Humans , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/genetics , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/etiology , Intestinal Mucosa/pathology , Epithelial Cells/metabolism , Epithelial Cells/pathology , Apoptosis , Animals , Signal Transduction , Complement Activation/geneticsABSTRACT
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Gut bacterial sphingolipids, primarily produced by Bacteroidetes, have dual roles as bacterial virulence factors and regulators of the host mucosal immune system, including regulatory T cells and invariant natural killer T cells. Patients with inflammatory bowel disease display altered sphingolipids profiles in fecal samples. However, how bacterial sphingolipids modulate mucosal homeostasis and regulate intestinal inflammation remains unclear. METHODS: We used dextran sodium sulfate (DSS)-induced colitis in mice monocolonized with Bacteroides fragilis strains expressing or lacking sphingolipids to assess the influence of bacterial sphingolipids on intestinal inflammation using transcriptional, protein, and cellular analyses. Colonic explant and organoid were used to study the function of bacterial sphingolipids. Host mucosal immune cells and cytokines were profiled and characterized using flow cytometry, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and Western blot, and cytokine function in vivo was investigated by monoclonal antibody injection. RESULTS: B fragilis sphingolipids exacerbated intestinal inflammation. Mice monocolonized with B fragilis lacking sphingolipids exhibited less severe DSS-induced colitis. This amelioration of colitis was associated with increased production of interleukin (IL)-22 by ILC3. Mice colonized with B fragilis lacking sphingolipids following DSS treatment showed enhanced epithelial STAT3 activity, intestinal cell proliferation, and antimicrobial peptide production. Protection against DSS colitis associated with B fragilis lacking sphingolipids was reversed on IL22 blockade. Furthermore, bacterial sphingolipids restricted epithelial IL18 production following DSS treatment and interfered with IL22 production by a subset of ILC3 cells expressing both IL18R and major histocompatibility complex class II. CONCLUSIONS: B fragilis-derived sphingolipids exacerbate mucosal inflammation by impeding epithelial IL18 expression and concomitantly suppressing the production of IL22 by ILC3 cells.
Subject(s)
Bacteroides fragilis , Colitis , Dextran Sulfate , Interleukin-22 , Interleukins , Sphingolipids , Animals , Sphingolipids/metabolism , Interleukins/metabolism , Mice , Colitis/immunology , Colitis/pathology , Colitis/chemically induced , Colitis/microbiology , Colitis/metabolism , Dextran Sulfate/toxicity , Bacteroides fragilis/immunology , Disease Models, Animal , Humans , Intestinal Mucosa/immunology , Intestinal Mucosa/pathology , Intestinal Mucosa/microbiology , Intestinal Mucosa/metabolism , STAT3 Transcription Factor/metabolism , Mice, Inbred C57BLABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Very early onset inflammatory bowel disease (VEOIBD) is defined as disease onset in patients younger thanâ 6 years. Challenges in treatment of VEOIBD include lack of approved therapies and increased incidence of monogenic immunodeficiencies. We report on patterns of anti-TNF use, efficacy, and safety in a large cohort of patients with VEOIBD. METHODS: Very early onset inflammatory bowel disease patients receiving care at a single center were prospectively enrolled in a data registry and biorepository starting in 2012. Whole exome sequencing was available to all patients. Clinical data including IBD medication use and response were extracted from the medical record. We examined antitumor necrosis factor (anti-TNF) cumulative exposure and time to failure and evaluated the effect of covariates on anti-TNF failure using Cox proportional hazard regression. RESULTS: In this cohort of 216 VEOIBD patients with median 5.8-year follow-up, 116 (53.7%) were TNF-exposed. Sixty-two TNF-exposed patients (53.4%) received their first dose atâ younger thanâ 6 years. Cumulative exposure to anti-TNF was 23.6% at 1 year, 38.4% at 3 years, and 43.4% at 5 years after diagnosis. Cumulative exposure was greater in patients with Crohn's disease (P = .0004) and in those diagnosed in 2012 or later (P < .0001). Tumor necrosis factor failure occurred in 50.9% of those exposed. Features predictive of anti-TNF failure included ulcerative colitis/IBD-unclassified (hazard ratio, 1.94; P = .03), stricturing (hazard ratio, 2.20; P = .04), and younger age at diagnosis (hazard ratio, 1.25; P = .01). Adverse events occurred in 22.6% of infliximab-exposed and 14.3% of adalimumab-exposed. CONCLUSIONS: Efficacy and safety of anti-TNFs in VEOIBD is comparable to what has previously been reported in older patients.
Half of VEOIBD patients followed for a median 5.8 years used anti-TNF. Anti-TNF failure occurred in half of those exposed. Stricturing, UC/IBD-U, and younger age at diagnosis were predictors of failure. Adverse events were similar to those reported in older patients.
ABSTRACT
Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) are chronic inflammatory conditions of the gastrointestinal tract, including Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis and inflammatory bowel disease-undefined (IBD-U). IBD are understood to be multifactorial, involving genetic, immune, microbial and environmental factors. Advances in next generation sequencing facilitated the growing identification of over 80 monogenic causes of IBD, many of which overlap with Inborn errors of immunity (IEI); Approximately a third of currently identified IEI result in gastrointestinal manifestations, many of which are inflammatory in nature, such as IBD. Indeed, the gastrointestinal tract represents an opportune system to study IEI as it consists of the largest mass of lymphoid tissue in the body and employs a thin layer of intestinal epithelial cells as the critical barrier between the intestinal lumen and the host. In this mini-review, a selection of pertinent IEI resulting in monogenic IBD is described involving disorders in the intestinal epithelial barrier, phagocytosis, T and B cell defects, as well as those impairing central and peripheral tolerance. The contribution of disrupted gut-microbiota-host interactions in disturbing intestinal homeostasis among patients with intestinal disease is also discussed. The molecular mechanisms driving pathogenesis are reviewed along with the personalized therapeutic interventions and investigational avenues this growing knowledge has enabled.
Subject(s)
Colitis, Ulcerative , Crohn Disease , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases , Colitis, Ulcerative/genetics , Crohn Disease/genetics , Homeostasis , Humans , IntestinesABSTRACT
Mutations in the tetratricopeptide repeat domain 7A (TTC7A) gene are a rare cause of congenital enteropathy that can result in significant morbidity. TTC7A deficiency leads to disruption of the intestinal epithelium. The histopathology of this condition has been partly described in case reports and clinical studies. This manuscript describes an in-depth investigation of the pediatric gastrointestinal pathology of the largest histologically examined cohort with confirmed TTC7A mutations reported to date and, for the first time, compared the findings to age-matched and sex-matched control patients with intestinal atresia not thought to be associated with TTC7A mutations. Hematoxylin and eosin-stained slides of endoscopically obtained mucosal biopsies and surgical resection specimens from 7 patients with known TTC7A mutations were examined retrospectively. The microscopic findings were found to be on a spectrum from atresia-predominant to those with predominantly epithelial abnormalities. Several unique histopathologic characteristics were observed when compared with controls. These included neutrophilic colitis and prominent lamina propria eosinophilia throughout the gastrointestinal tract. Striking architectural abnormalities of the epithelium were observed in 4 of the 7 patients. The 5 patients with intestinal atresia demonstrated hypertrophy and disorganization of the colonic muscularis mucosae accompanied by bland spindle cell nodules within the intestinal wall. The components of the latter were further elucidated using immunohistochemistry, and we subsequently hypothesize that they represent obliterated mucosa with remnants of the muscularis mucosae. Finally, atrophic gastritis was noted in 4 patients. In conclusion, the unique histopathologic characteristics of TTC7A mutation-associated enteropathy described herein more fully describe this novel disease entity in infants who present with congenital enteropathy or enterocolitis.
Subject(s)
Germ-Line Mutation , Intestinal Atresia , Proteins , Severe Combined Immunodeficiency , Child , Humans , Infant , Intestinal Atresia/genetics , Intestinal Mucosa/pathology , Intestines/abnormalities , Proteins/genetics , Retrospective Studies , Severe Combined Immunodeficiency/genetics , Severe Combined Immunodeficiency/pathologyABSTRACT
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Over 80 monogenic causes of very early onset inflammatory bowel disease [VEOIBD] have been identified. Prior reports of the natural history of VEOIBD have not considered monogenic disease status. The objective of this study is to describe clinical phenotypes and outcomes in a large single-centre cohort of patients with VEOIBD and universal access to whole exome sequencing [WES]. METHODS: Patients receiving IBD care at a single centre were prospectively enrolled in a longitudinal data repository starting in 2012. WES was offered with enrollment. Enrolled patients were filtered by age of diagnosis <6 years to comprise a VEOIBD cohort. Monogenic disease was identified by filtering proband variants for rare, loss-of-function, or missense variants in known VEOIBD genes inherited according to standard Mendelian inheritance patterns. RESULTS: This analysis included 216 VEOIBD patients, followed for a median of 5.8 years. Seventeen patients [7.9%] had monogenic disease. Patients with monogenic IBD were younger at diagnosis and were more likely to have Crohn's disease phenotype with higher rates of stricturing and penetrating disease and extraintestinal manifestations. Patients with monogenic disease were also more likely to experience outcomes of intensive care unit [ICU] hospitalisation, gastrostomy tube, total parenteral nutrition use, stunting at 3-year follow-up, haematopoietic stem cell transplant, and death. A total of 41 patients [19.0%] had infantile-onset disease. After controlling for monogenic disease, patients with infantile-onset IBD did not have increased risk for most severity outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: Monogenic disease is an important driver of disease severity in VEOIBD. WES is a valuable tool in prognostication and management of VEOIBD.
Subject(s)
Crohn Disease , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases , Age of Onset , Crohn Disease/diagnosis , Crohn Disease/genetics , Crohn Disease/therapy , Humans , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/diagnosis , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/genetics , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/therapy , Intestines , PhenotypeABSTRACT
Currently over 70 genes known to be causative in very early onset inflammatory bowel disease (VEOIBD) have been identified. In the current issue of Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, 2 articles describing monogenetic forms of VEOIBD are highlighted. One describes a patient with life-threatening VEOIBD and a mutation in ITGA6, illustrating the importance of the epithelial barrier in maintaining mucosal homeostasis. The other describes the presentation and management of 10 patients with VEOIBD secondary to damaging mutations in MVK, resulting in mevalonate kinase deficiency. Though most monogenic causes of VEOIBD remain "private," understanding the different categories of pathways affected in children with VEOIBD is critical and has already resulted in invaluable insight in the management of patients with VEOIBD and may hold strong implications for the care of IBD overall.
Subject(s)
Colitis , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases , Age of Onset , Child , Humans , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/genetics , Intestines , MutationABSTRACT
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Very early onset inflammatory bowel disease [VEOIBD] is characterized by intestinal inflammation affecting infants and children less than 6 years of age. To date, over 60 monogenic aetiologies of VEOIBD have been identified, many characterized by highly penetrant recessive or dominant variants in underlying immune and/or epithelial pathways. We sought to identify the genetic cause of VEOIBD in a subset of patients with a unique clinical presentation. METHODS: Whole exome sequencing was performed on five families with ten patients who presented with a similar constellation of symptoms including medically refractory infantile-onset IBD, bilateral sensorineural hearing loss and, in the majority, recurrent infections. Genetic aetiologies of VEOIBD were assessed and Sanger sequencing was performed to confirm novel genetic findings. Western analysis on peripheral blood mononuclear cells and functional studies with epithelial cell lines were employed. RESULTS: In each of the ten patients, we identified damaging heterozygous or biallelic variants in the Syntaxin-Binding Protein 3 gene [STXBP3], a protein known to regulate intracellular vesicular trafficking in the syntaxin-binding protein family of molecules, but not associated to date with either VEOIBD or sensorineural hearing loss. These mutations interfere with either intron splicing or protein stability and lead to reduced STXBP3 protein expression. Knock-down of STXBP3 in CaCo2 cells resulted in defects in cell polarity. CONCLUSION: Overall, we describe a novel genetic syndrome and identify a critical role for STXBP3 in VEOIBD, sensorineural hearing loss and immune dysregulation.
Subject(s)
Hearing Loss, Sensorineural/genetics , Immune System Diseases/genetics , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/genetics , Qa-SNARE Proteins/analysis , Age of Onset , Female , Genetic Variation/genetics , Hearing Loss, Sensorineural/epidemiology , Humans , Immune System Diseases/epidemiology , Infant, Newborn , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/epidemiology , Male , Qa-SNARE Proteins/genetics , Exome SequencingABSTRACT
Cryptogenic organizing pneumonia (COP, formerly bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia) is rare in children. We describe an 11-year-old girl with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) reactivation/presumed post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease (PTLD) 15 months after undergoing a deceased donor kidney transplantation. Treatment with reduced immunosuppression, ganciclovir, and cytomegalovirus immunoglobulin was complicated by severe graft rejection, prompting therapy with methylprednisolone, anti-thymocyte globulin and four weekly doses of rituximab (total 1500 mg/m(2)). Tacrolimus- and prednisone-based anti-rejection prophylaxis was complemented with low-dose sirolimus. When the lactate dehydrogenase and uric acid levels rose 10 weeks after the first rituximab infusion and bilateral pulmonary nodules were detected by computerized tomography, recurrence of PTLD was suspected. Open lung biopsy of the clinically asymptomatic patient identified the nodules as COP, characterized by abundant CD3(+) T-cells, few B-cells, and the absence of EBV, cytomegalovirus, or adenovirus antigens. With normalization of the peripheral B-cell count, EB viremia reappeared and persisted, despite minimal immunosuppression. Four years later, the patient was diagnosed with classical Hodgkin lymphoma-type PTLD with multiple pulmonary and abdominal nodes. This first report of rituximab-associated, pediatric COP highlights the risk of pulmonary complications after treatment with B-cell depleting agents in solid organ transplant recipients, and the importance of a histopathologic diagnosis and vigilant follow-up of such lesions.
Subject(s)
Antibodies, Monoclonal/adverse effects , Bronchiolitis Obliterans/chemically induced , Immunologic Factors/adverse effects , Kidney Transplantation/adverse effects , Lymphoproliferative Disorders/drug therapy , Antibodies, Monoclonal, Murine-Derived , Bronchiolitis Obliterans/pathology , Child , Epstein-Barr Virus Infections/complications , Female , Graft Rejection/pathology , Graft Rejection/therapy , Humans , RituximabABSTRACT
Very early onset inflammatory bowel disease (VEO-IBD) is defined as IBD presenting before 6 years of age. When compared with IBD diagnosed in older children, VEO-IBD has some distinct characteristics such as a higher likelihood of an underlying monogenic etiology or primary immune deficiency. In addition, patients with VEO-IBD have a higher incidence of inflammatory bowel disease unclassified (IBD-U) as compared with older-onset IBD. In some populations, VEO-IBD represents the age group with the fastest growing incidence of IBD. There are contradicting reports on whether VEO-IBD is more resistant to conventional medical interventions. There is a strong need for ongoing research in the field of VEO-IBD to provide optimized management of these complex patients. Here, we provide an approach to diagnosis and management of patients with VEO-IBD. These recommendations are based on expert opinion from members of the VEO-IBD Consortium (www.VEOIBD.org). We highlight the importance of monogenic etiologies, underlying immune deficiencies, and provide a comprehensive description of monogenic etiologies identified to date that are responsible for VEO-IBD.
Subject(s)
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/diagnosis , Primary Immunodeficiency Diseases/complications , Age of Onset , Child, Preschool , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Humans , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/epidemiology , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/etiology , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/genetics , Phenotype , Primary Immunodeficiency Diseases/epidemiologyABSTRACT
Background: Transcriptional profiling has been performed on biopsies from ulcerative colitis patients. Limitations in prior studies include the variability introduced by inflammation, anatomic site of biopsy, extent of disease, and medications. We sought to more globally understand the variability of gene expression from patients with ulcerative colitis to advance our understanding of its pathogenesis and to guide clinical study design. Methods: We performed transcriptional profiling on 13 subjects, including pediatric and adult patients from 2 hospital sites. For each patient, we collected 6 biopsies from macroscopically inflamed tissue and 4 biopsies from macroscopically healthy-appearing tissue. Isolated RNA was used for microarray gene expression analysis utilizing Affymetrix Human Primeview microarrays. Ingenuity pathway analysis was used to assess over-representation of gene ontology and biological pathways. RNAseq was also performed, and differential analysis was assessed to compare affected vs unaffected samples. Finally, we modeled the minimum number of biopsies required to reliably detect gene expression across different subject numbers. Results: Transcriptional profiles co-clustered independently of the hospital collection site, patient age, sex, and colonic location, which parallels prior gene expression findings. A small set of genes not previously described was identified. Our modeling analysis reveals the number of biopsies and patients per cohort to yield reliable results in clinical studies. Conclusions: Key findings include concordance, including some expansion, of previously published gene expression studies and similarity among different age groups. We also established a reliable statistical model for biopsy collection for future clinical studies.
Subject(s)
Colitis, Ulcerative/genetics , Colon/metabolism , Intestinal Mucosa/metabolism , Adolescent , Adult , Disease Susceptibility/metabolism , Female , Gene Expression , Genome, Human/genetics , Humans , Ileum/metabolism , Male , Microarray Analysis , Middle Aged , Polymerase Chain Reaction , RNA/metabolism , Young AdultABSTRACT
Despite major progress in defining the genetic basis of Mendelian disorders, the molecular etiology of many cases remains unknown. Patients with these undiagnosed disorders often have complex presentations and require treatment by multiple health care specialists. Here, we describe an integrated clinical diagnostic and research program using whole-exome and whole-genome sequencing (WES/WGS) for Mendelian disease gene discovery. This program employs specific case ascertainment parameters, a WES/WGS computational analysis pipeline that is optimized for Mendelian disease gene discovery with variant callers tuned to specific inheritance modes, an interdisciplinary crowdsourcing strategy for genomic sequence analysis, matchmaking for additional cases, and integration of the findings regarding gene causality with the clinical management plan. The interdisciplinary gene discovery team includes clinical, computational, and experimental biomedical specialists who interact to identify the genetic etiology of the disease, and when so warranted, to devise improved or novel treatments for affected patients. This program effectively integrates the clinical and research missions of an academic medical center and affords both diagnostic and therapeutic options for patients suffering from genetic disease. It may therefore be germane to other academic medical institutions engaged in implementing genomic medicine programs.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Infliximab is used in the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease. Previously reported neurological complications include central and peripheral demyelinating disorders and neuropathies occurring months into therapy. PATIENT DESCRIPTION: A seven-year-old boy diagnosed with ulcerative colitis and primary sclerosing cholangitis received infliximab. Six hours following his uneventful infusion, he awoke with headache and emesis and rapidly became obtunded. Neurological examination revealed minimally reactive pupils and otherwise absent brainstem reflexes. Cranial computed tomography revealed hypodense lesions in the cerebral hemispheres, cerebellum, and pons accompanied by hemorrhage. Magnetic resonance imaging showed diffusion restriction concerning for ischemia with areas of ring enhancement suggestive of inflammation. Vessel imaging was normal, and cerebrospinal fluid and serum studies showed only an extremely elevated level of d-dimer. Echocardiogram showed depressed ventricular function but neither intracardiac shunt nor thrombus. Within four days he met criteria for brain death. Autopsy was refused. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first report of a fulminant, fatal central nervous system process to occur after an initial dose of infliximab. The differential diagnosis includes multifocal arterial strokes and a devastating demyelinating process.