St. Giles Laboratory of Human Genetics of Infectious Diseases, Rockefeller Branch, The Rockefeller University, New York, New York, USA.
Laboratory of Human Genetics of Infectious Diseases, Necker Branch, INSERM U1163, Necker Hospital for Sick Children, Paris, France.
J Clin Invest. 2023 Feb 1;133(3):e166283. doi: 10.1172/JCI166283.
Since 2003, rare inborn errors of human type I IFN immunity have been discovered, each underlying a few severe viral illnesses. Autoantibodies neutralizing type I IFNs due to rare inborn errors of autoimmune regulator (AIRE)-driven T cell tolerance were discovered in 2006, but not initially linked to any viral disease. These two lines of clinical investigation converged in 2020, with the discovery that inherited and/or autoimmune deficiencies of type I IFN immunity accounted for approximately 15%-20% of cases of critical COVID-19 pneumonia in unvaccinated individuals. Thus, insufficient type I IFN immunity at the onset of SARS-CoV-2 infection may be a general determinant of life-threatening COVID-19. These findings illustrate the unpredictable, but considerable, contribution of the study of rare human genetic diseases to basic biology and public health.
自 2003 年以来,人们发现了几种罕见的人类 I 型干扰素免疫先天缺陷,每种缺陷都导致几种严重的病毒性疾病。2006 年发现了由于自身免疫调节因子(AIRE)驱动的 T 细胞耐受的罕见先天错误而中和 I 型干扰素的自身抗体,但最初与任何病毒性疾病无关。这两条临床研究线索在 2020 年汇聚,发现未接种疫苗的个体中约有 15%-20%的重症 COVID-19 肺炎病例是由 I 型干扰素免疫的遗传和/或自身免疫缺陷引起的。因此,SARS-CoV-2 感染初期 I 型干扰素免疫不足可能是危及生命的 COVID-19 的一个普遍决定因素。这些发现说明了对罕见人类遗传疾病的研究对基础生物学和公共卫生的不可预测但相当大的贡献。