The Role of Interferon-γ in Autoimmune Polyendocrine Syndrome Type 1.
Journal
The New England journal of medicine
Journal Volume
390
Journal Issue
20
Start Page
1873
End Page
1884
ISSN
1533-4406
Date Issued
2024-05-30
Author(s)
Oikonomou, Vasileios
Smith, Grace
Constantine, Gregory M
Schmitt, Monica M
Ferré, Elise M N
Alejo, Julie C
Riley, Deanna
Kumar, Dhaneshwar
Dos Santos Dias, Lucas
Pechacek, Joseph
Hadjiyannis, Yannis
Webb, Taura
Seifert, Bryce A
Ghosh, Rajarshi
Walkiewicz, Magdalena
Martin, Daniel
Besnard, Marine
Snarr, Brendan D
Deljookorani, Shiva
Lee, Chyi-Chia R
DiMaggio, Tom
Barber, Princess
Rosen, Lindsey B
Rastegar, Andre
de Jesus, Adriana A
Stoddard, Jennifer
Kuehn, Hye Sun
Break, Timothy J
Kong, Heidi H
Castelo-Soccio, Leslie
Colton, Ben
Warner, Blake M
Kleiner, David E
Quezado, Martha M
Davis, Jeremy L
Fennelly, Kevin P
Olivier, Kenneth N
Rosenzweig, Sergio D
Suffredini, Anthony F
Anderson, Mark S
Swidergall, Marc
Guillonneau, Carole
Notarangelo, Luigi D
Goldbach-Mansky, Raphaela
Neth, Olaf
Monserrat-Garcia, Maria Teresa
Valverde-Fernandez, Justo
Lucena, Jose Manuel
Gomez-Gila, Ana Lucia
Garcia Rojas, Angela
Seppänen, Mikko R J
Lohi, Jouko
Hero, Matti
Laakso, Saila
Klemetti, Paula
Lundberg, Vanja
Ekwall, Olov
Olbrich, Peter
Winer, Karen K
Afzali, Behdad
Moutsopoulos, Niki M
Holland, Steven M
Heller, Theo
Pittaluga, Stefania
Lionakis, Michail S
Abstract
Background Autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type 1 (APS-1) is a life-threatening, autosomal recessive syndrome caused by autoimmune regulator (AIRE) deficiency. In APS-1, self-reactive T cells escape thymic negative selection, infiltrate organs, and drive autoimmune injury. The effector mechanisms governing T-cell-mediated damage in APS-1 remain poorly understood. Methods We examined whether APS-1 could be classified as a disease mediated by interferon-γ. We first assessed patients with APS-1 who were participating in a prospective natural history study and evaluated mRNA and protein expression in blood and tissues. We then examined the pathogenic role of interferon-γusing Aire-/-Ifng-/- mice and Aire-/- mice treated with the Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitor ruxolitinib. On the basis of our findings, we used ruxolitinib to treat five patients with APS-1 and assessed clinical, immunologic, histologic, transcriptional, and autoantibody responses. Results Patients with APS-1 had enhanced interferon-γresponses in blood and in all examined autoimmunity-affected tissues. Aire-/- mice had selectively increased interferon-γproduction by T cells and enhanced interferon-γ, phosphorylated signal transducer and activator of transcription 1 (pSTAT1), and CXCL9 signals in multiple organs. Ifng ablation or ruxolitinib-induced JAK-STAT blockade in Aire-/- mice normalized interferon-γresponses and averted T-cell infiltration and damage in organs. Ruxolitinib treatment of five patients with APS-1 led to decreased levels of T-cell-derived interferon-γ, normalized interferon-γand CXCL9 levels, and remission of alopecia, oral candidiasis, nail dystrophy, gastritis, enteritis, arthritis, Sjögren's-like syndrome, urticaria, and thyroiditis. No serious adverse effects from ruxolitinib were identified in these patients. Conclusions Our findings indicate that APS-1, which is caused by AIRE deficiency, is characterized by excessive, multiorgan interferon-γ-mediated responses. JAK inhibition with ruxolitinib in five patients showed promising results. © 2024 Massachusetts Medical Society.
Type
journal article