Genetic and phenotypic spectrum associated with IFIH1 gain-of-function

Author

Rice, Gillian I.

Park, Sehoon

Gavazzi, Francesco

Adang, Laura A.

Ayuk, Loveline A.

Eyck, Lien Van

Seabra, Luis

Barrea, Christophe

Battini, Roberta

Belot, Alexandre

Berg, Stefan

de Villemeur, Thierry Billette

Bley, Annette E.

Blumkin, Lubov

Boespflug-Tanguy, Odile

Briggs, Tracy A.

Brimble, Elise

Dale, Russell C..

Darin, Niklas

Debray, François-Guillaume

De Giorgis, Valentina

Denecke, Jonas

Doummar, Diane

Hagelsrum, Gunilla Drake af

Eleftheriou, Despina

Estienne, Margherita

Fazzi, Elisa

Feillet, François

Galli, Jessica

Hartog, Nicholas

Harvengt, Julie

Heron, Bénédicte

Heron, Delphine

Kelly, Diedre A.

Lev, Dorit

Levrat, Virginie

Livingston, John H.

Marti, Itxaso

Mignot, Cyril

Mochel, Fanny

Nougues, Marie-Christine

Oppermann, Ilena

Pérez-Dueñas, Belén

Popp, Bernt

Rodero, Mathieu P.

Rodriguez, Diana

Saletti, Veronica

Sharpe, Cia

Tonduti, Davide

Vadlamani, Gayatri

Haren, Keith Van

Vila, Miguel Tomas

Vogt, Julie

Wassmer, Evangeline

Wiedemann, Arnaud

Wilson, Callum J.

Zerem, Ayelet

Zweier, Christiane

Zuberi, Sameer M.

Orcesi, Simona

Vanderver, Adeline L.

Hur, Sun

Crow, Yanick J.

Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona

Publication date

2020

Abstract

IFIH1 gain-of-function has been reported as a cause of a type I interferonopathy encompassing a spectrum of autoinflammatory phenotypes including Aicardi-Goutières syndrome and Singleton Merten syndrome. Ascertaining patients through a European and North American collaboration, we set out to describe the molecular, clinical and interferon status of a cohort of individuals with pathogenic heterozygous mutations in IFIH1. We identified 74 individuals from 51 families segregating a total of 27 likely pathogenic mutations in IFIH1. Ten adult individuals, 13.5% of all mutation carriers, were clinically asymptomatic (with seven of these aged over 50 years). All mutations were associated with enhanced type I interferon signaling, including six variants (22%) which were predicted as benign according to multiple in silico pathogenicity programs. The identified mutations cluster close to the ATP binding region of the protein. These data confirm variable expression and nonpenetrance as important characteristics of the IFIH1 genotype, a consistent association with enhanced type I interferon signaling, and a common mutational mechanism involving increased RNA binding affinity or decreased efficiency of ATP hydrolysis and filament disassembly rate.

Document Type

Article

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Aicardi-Goutières syndrome; IFIH1; MDA5; Singleton Merten syndrome; Type I interferonopathy

Publisher

 

Related items

Human mutation ; Vol. 41 (january 2020), p. 837-849

Rights

open access

Aquest document està subjecte a una llicència d'ús Creative Commons. Es permet la reproducció total o parcial, la distribució, la comunicació pública de l'obra i la creació d'obres derivades, fins i tot amb finalitats comercials, sempre i quan es reconegui l'autoria de l'obra original.

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

This item appears in the following Collection(s)