Sneller M C, Wang J, Dale J K, Strober W, Middelton L A, Choi Y, Fleisher T A, Lim M S, Jaffe E S, Puck J M, Lenardo M J, Straus S E
Laboratory of Immunoregulation, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
Blood. 1997 Feb 15;89(4):1341-8.
Programmed cell death (apoptosis) of activated lymphocytes is critical to immune homeostasis. The cell surface protein Fas (CD95) and its ligand play a pivotal role in regulating lymphocyte apoptosis, and defective expression of either Fas or Fas ligand results in marked over accumulation of mature lymphocytes and autoimmune disease in mice. The results of recent studies suggest that defective lymphocyte apoptosis caused by mutations of the Fas gene can result in a severe autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome (ALPS) in humans. To define the clinical, genetic, and immunologic spectrum of ALPS, 9 patients and their families were extensively evaluated with routine clinical studies, lymphocyte phenotyping, genotyping, and in vitro assays for lymphocyte apoptosis. Individual patients were followed up for 3 months to 6 years. ALPS was identified in 9 unrelated children as manifested by moderate to massive splenomegaly and lymphadenopathy, hypergammaglobulinemia, autoimmunity, B-cell lymphocytosis, and the expansion of an unusual population of CD4- CD8- T cells that express the alpha/beta T-cell receptor (TCR). All patients showed defective lymphocyte apoptosis in vitro. Heterozygous mutations of the Fas gene were detected in 8 patients. One ALPS patient lacked a Fas gene mutation. Healthy relatives with Fas mutations were identified in 7 of 8 ALPS kindreds. These relatives also showed in vitro abnormalities of Fas-mediated lymphocyte apoptosis, but clinical features of ALPS were not present in the vast majority of these individuals. ALPS is a unique clinical syndrome in which in vitro abnormalities of lymphocyte apoptosis are associated with abnormal lymphoproliferation and autoimmunity. These findings provide evidence that apoptosis of activated lymphocytes is an important mechanism for maintaining immunologic homeostasis and self-tolerance in humans. Fas gene mutations account for impaired lymphocyte apoptosis in only a subset of patients with ALPS.
活化淋巴细胞的程序性细胞死亡(凋亡)对免疫稳态至关重要。细胞表面蛋白Fas(CD95)及其配体在调节淋巴细胞凋亡中起关键作用,Fas或Fas配体的表达缺陷会导致小鼠成熟淋巴细胞显著过度积累和自身免疫性疾病。最近的研究结果表明,Fas基因突变导致的淋巴细胞凋亡缺陷可导致人类严重的自身免疫性淋巴增殖综合征(ALPS)。为了明确ALPS的临床、遗传和免疫学特征,对9例患者及其家族进行了常规临床研究、淋巴细胞表型分析、基因分型以及淋巴细胞凋亡的体外检测等广泛评估。对每位患者随访3个月至6年。在9名无亲缘关系的儿童中确诊为ALPS,表现为中度至重度脾肿大和淋巴结病、高球蛋白血症、自身免疫、B细胞淋巴细胞增多,以及表达α/βT细胞受体(TCR)的异常CD4 - CD8 - T细胞群体的扩增。所有患者体外均显示淋巴细胞凋亡缺陷。在8例患者中检测到Fas基因杂合突变。1例ALPS患者未检测到Fas基因突变。在8个ALPS家系中的7个家系中鉴定出携带Fas突变的健康亲属。这些亲属体外也显示Fas介导的淋巴细胞凋亡异常,但绝大多数个体无ALPS的临床特征。ALPS是一种独特的临床综合征,其中淋巴细胞凋亡的体外异常与异常淋巴增殖和自身免疫相关。这些发现证明活化淋巴细胞的凋亡是维持人类免疫稳态和自身耐受的重要机制。Fas基因突变仅在一部分ALPS患者中导致淋巴细胞凋亡受损。