Frontiers in Immunology (Apr 2022)

Case Report: Atypical Manifestations Associated With FOXP3 Mutations. The “Fil Rouge” of Treg Between IPEX Features and Other Clinical Entities?

  • Micaela Gentile,
  • Micaela Gentile,
  • Maurizio Miano,
  • Paola Terranova,
  • Stefano Giardino,
  • Maura Faraci,
  • Filomena Pierri,
  • Enrico Drago,
  • Daniela Verzola,
  • Gianmarco Ghiggeri,
  • Enrico Verrina,
  • Andrea Angeletti,
  • Barbara Cafferata,
  • Alice Grossi,
  • Isabella Ceccherini,
  • Gianluca Caridi,
  • Francesca Lugani,
  • Lorenzo Nescis,
  • Enrico Fiaccadori,
  • Enrico Fiaccadori,
  • Luca Lanino,
  • Daniela Fenoglio,
  • Daniela Fenoglio,
  • Edoardo La Porta,
  • Edoardo La Porta

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.854749
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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IntroductionThe Forkhead box protein P3 (FOXP3) is a transcription factor central to the function of regulatory T cells (Treg). Mutations in the FOXP3 gene lead to a systemic disease called immune dysregulation, polyendocrinopathy, and enteropathy, an X-linked syndrome (IPEX) characterized by the triad of early-onset intractable diarrhea, type 1 diabetes, and eczema. An atypical presentation of IPEX has been reported.MethodWe report rare cases with equivocal clinical associations that included inflammatory, kidney, and hematologic involvements screened with massively parallel sequencing techniques.ResultsTwo patients with hemizygous mutations of FOXP3 [c.779T>A (p.L260Q)] and [c.1087A>G (p.I363V)] presented clinical manifestations not included in typical cases of IPEX: one was a 16-year-old male patient with an initial clinical diagnosis of autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome (ALPS) and who developed proteinuria and decreased kidney function due to membranous nephropathy, an autoimmune renal condition characterized by glomerular sub-epithelial antibodies. The second patient was a 2-year-old child with bone marrow failure who developed the same glomerular lesions of membranous nephropathy and received a bone marrow transplantation. High levels of IgG4 in serum, bone marrow, and kidney led to the definition of IgG4-related kidney disease (IgG4 RKD) in this young boy. The circulating Treg levels were normal in the former case and very low in the second.ConclusionTwo atypical associations of functional mutations of FOXP3 that include ALPS and IgG4 RKD are described. Membranous nephropathy leading to renal failure completed in both cases the clinical phenotypes that should be included in the clinical panorama of FOXP3 failure.

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