[HTML][HTML] Unravelling the association of partial T-cell immunodeficiency and immune dysregulation

A Liston, A Enders, OM Siggs - Nature Reviews Immunology, 2008 - nature.com
Nature Reviews Immunology, 2008nature.com
Partial T-cell immunodeficiencies constitute a heterogeneous cluster of disorders
characterized by an incomplete reduction in T-cell number or activity. The immune
deficiency component of these diseases is less severe than that of the severe T-cell
immunodeficiencies and therefore some ability to respond to infectious organisms is
retained. Unlike severe T-cell immunodeficiencies, however, partial immunodeficiencies are
commonly associated with hyper-immune dysregulation, including autoimmunity …
Abstract
Partial T-cell immunodeficiencies constitute a heterogeneous cluster of disorders characterized by an incomplete reduction in T-cell number or activity. The immune deficiency component of these diseases is less severe than that of the severe T-cell immunodeficiencies and therefore some ability to respond to infectious organisms is retained. Unlike severe T-cell immunodeficiencies, however, partial immunodeficiencies are commonly associated with hyper-immune dysregulation, including autoimmunity, inflammatory diseases and elevated IgE production. This causative association is counter-intuitive — immune deficiencies are caused by loss-of-function changes to the T-cell component, whereas the coincident autoimmune symptoms are the consequence of gain-of-function changes. This Review details the genetic basis of partial T -cell immunodeficiencies and draws on recent advances in mouse models to propose mechanisms by which a reduction in T-cell numbers or function may disturb the population-dependent balance between activation and tolerance.
nature.com