Ciancanelli Michael J, Abel Laurent, Zhang Shen-Ying, Casanova Jean-Laurent
St Giles Laboratory of Human Genetics of Infectious Diseases, Rockefeller Branch, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY, USA.
St Giles Laboratory of Human Genetics of Infectious Diseases, Rockefeller Branch, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY, USA; Laboratory of Human Genetics of Infectious Diseases, Necker Branch, INSERM-U1163, Necker Hospital for Sick Children, Paris, France; Paris Descartes University, Imagine Institute, Paris, France.
Curr Opin Immunol. 2016 Feb;38:109-20. doi: 10.1016/j.coi.2015.12.002. Epub 2016 Jan 4.
Influenza viruses cause mild to moderate respiratory illness in most people, and only rarely devastating or fatal infections. The virulence factors encoded by viral genes can explain seasonal or geographic differences at the population level but are unlikely to account for inter-individual clinical variability. Inherited or acquired immunodeficiencies may thus underlie severe cases of influenza. The crucial role of host genes was first demonstrated by forward genetics in inbred mice, with the identification of interferon (IFN)-α/β-inducible Mx1 as a canonical influenza susceptibility gene. Reverse genetics has subsequently characterized the in vivo role of other mouse genes involved in IFN-α/β and -λ immunity. A series of in vitro studies with mouse and human cells have also refined the cell-intrinsic mechanisms of protection against influenza viruses. Population-based human genetic studies have not yet uncovered variants with a significant impact. Interestingly, human primary immunodeficiencies affecting T and B cells were also not found to predispose to severe influenza. Recently however, human IRF7 was shown to be essential for IFN-α/β- and IFN-λ-dependent protective immunity against primary influenza in vivo, as inferred from a patient with life-threatening influenza revealed to be IRF7-deficient by whole exome sequencing. Next generation sequencing of human exomes and genomes will facilitate the analysis of the human genetic determinism of severe influenza.
流感病毒在大多数人身上引起轻度至中度呼吸道疾病,只有极少数情况下会导致毁灭性或致命感染。病毒基因编码的毒力因子可以解释人群层面的季节性或地理差异,但不太可能解释个体间的临床变异性。因此,遗传性或获得性免疫缺陷可能是流感重症病例的潜在病因。宿主基因的关键作用最初是在近交系小鼠中通过正向遗传学得以证明的,其中干扰素(IFN)-α/β诱导型Mx1被鉴定为典型的流感易感性基因。随后,反向遗传学对参与IFN-α/β和-λ免疫的其他小鼠基因的体内作用进行了表征。一系列针对小鼠和人类细胞的体外研究也完善了针对流感病毒的细胞内在保护机制。基于人群的人类遗传学研究尚未发现具有显著影响的变异。有趣的是,影响T细胞和B细胞的人类原发性免疫缺陷也未被发现易导致严重流感。然而,最近通过全外显子组测序发现一名患有危及生命流感的患者缺乏IRF7,由此推断人类IRF7对于体内针对原发性流感的IFN-α/β和IFN-λ依赖性保护性免疫至关重要。人类外显子组和基因组的下一代测序将有助于分析严重流感的人类遗传决定因素。