Combined immunodeficiency phenotype associated with inappropriate spontaneous and activation-induced apoptosis

Clinical and Experimental Immunology
C PignataS Venuta

Abstract

Programmed death of T cells has been proposed as one of the mechanisms by which HIV induces a decline in the number and functions of T cells in advanced AIDS. In this study we report on a patient affected by a congenital form of combined immunodeficiency presenting as a profound T cell activation deficiency. Subsequently, a gradual loss of T cells occurred, eventually resulting in a classical form of severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID). In this patient a sizeable fraction of apoptotic cells was documented in the first phase of the disease by either propidium iodide staining or DNA fragmentation analysis. The presence of anergic T cells of maternal origin and engrafted in the child was excluded by analysis of DNA polymorphic regions. At 4 years of age the patient died of disseminated interstitial pneumopathy, while still awaiting an HLA-matched bone marrow transplantation. On the occasion of a new pregnancy in the mother, the prenatal immunological evaluation of the female fetus revealed a T B+ SCID phenotype. This is the first observation of a primary immunodeficiency associated with inappropriate apoptosis.

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Apoptosis

Apoptosis is a specific process that leads to programmed cell death through the activation of an evolutionary conserved intracellular pathway leading to pathognomic cellular changes distinct from cellular necrosis