CD48 is a surface molecule with immunoregulatory functions. Following our initial report of a patient with a de novo heterozygous variant at amino acid S220 in the CD48 gene, we describe a second, unrelated patient with similar features of immune dysregulation and a missense change affecting the same residue. To further elucidate the specific pathogenic mechanisms of the identified variants, we reviewed patient records, analyzed patient-derived cells, and employed complementary in vitro and in vivo model systems, including transfected cell lines and CD48-deficient mice. We demonstrate that the variants are associated with altered distribution of CD48, characterized by diminished CD48 surface expression, intracellular retention, and activation of ER stress signaling. Patient T cells displayed increased susceptibility to apoptosis, reduced antiviral responses, and enhanced inflammation. Both patients exhibited T cell lymphopenia, a restricted T cell receptor repertoire diversity, and oligoclonal expansions consistent with antigen-driven selection. In parallel, virally infected CD48-deficient mice recapitulate key aspects of the human phenotype, including delayed antiviral immune responses, impaired viral clearance, and pronounced inflammation. We conclude that identified variants compromise CD48 cell surface localization, impair T cell survival and function, and predispose to inflammation, thereby highlighting the role of CD48 in immune regulation and the prevention of excessive inflammation.
Samantha Milanesi, Tiziana Lorenzini, Tommaso Marchetti, Diana Tintor, Raquel Planas, Ola Sabet, Lars Malmström, Sudip Acharya, Carson D. Williams, Zoe E. Manning, Jack H. Roser, Angelica C. Ehler, Michael Huber, Seraina Prader, Stefano Vavassori, Cullen M. Dutmer, Jordan K. Abbott, Jana Pachlopnik Schmid
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