BMJ Open Ophthalmology (Sep 2024)

Recurrent ocular toxoplasmosis is associated with interferon-gamma deficiency possibly due to genetic origin

  • Virpi Glumoff,
  • Janna Saarela,
  • Timo Hautala,
  • Nina Maria Hautala,
  • Zhi Chen,
  • Katri Pylkäs,
  • Mira Siiskonen,
  • Maija Joensuu,
  • Teija Paakkola,
  • Kaisa Kettunen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjophth-2024-001769
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1

Abstract

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Objective Ocular toxoplasmosis (OT) can cause posterior uveitis; causes of recurrent OT are not well understood. We explored clinical, immunological and genetic properties associated with recurrent OT.Methods and analysis A recurrent OT patient population (n=9) was identified. Clinical history, ophthalmological findings and immunological properties were assessed. B and T cell immunophenotyping including interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) responses were analysed. An analysis of 592 immunodeficiency genes was performed.Results The patients experienced 2–7 OT episodes (average 3.7). The first episode occurred at an average of 23.8 (SD 10.1) years of age. All patients had anterior uveitis, vitritis and various fundus lesions of OT. The patients had lymphocyte maturation abnormalities; the proportion of naive CD4+CD45RA+CCR7+ T cells was high in 5/9 cases, and the percentage of CD4+CD45RA−CCR7− T effector memory cells was reduced in 7/9 cases. An increased percentage of CD19+CD38lowCD21low activated B cells was observed in 5/9 cases. IFN-γ response was reduced in CD4+ (8.45±4.17 vs 21.27±11.0, p=0.025) and CD8+ (39.0±9.9 vs 18.1±18.1, p=0.017) T cells. Genetic analysis revealed several potentially harmful variants in immunologically active ERCC3, MANBA, IRF4, HAVCR2, CARMIL2, CD247, MPO, C2 and CD40 genes.Conclusion Our recurrent OT cases had deviations in lymphocyte maturation and IFN-γ responses possibly caused by genetic reasons. However, limitations of our study include failure to identify uniform genetic mechanisms. In addition, we cannot rule out the possibility that the immunological abnormalities can be triggered by chronic toxoplasmosis. Despite the limitations, our findings contribute to the understanding of ocular immunity and development of recurrent OT.