Frontiers in Pediatrics (Feb 2019)

Epstein-Barr Virus-Associated γδ T-Cell Lymphoproliferative Disorder Associated With Hypomorphic IL2RG Mutation

  • Kay Tanita,
  • Akihiro Hoshino,
  • Ken-Ichi Imadome,
  • Takahiro Kamiya,
  • Kento Inoue,
  • Tsubasa Okano,
  • Tzu-wen Yeh,
  • Masakatsu Yanagimachi,
  • Akira Shiraishi,
  • Masataka Ishimura,
  • Tilmann Schober,
  • Meino Rohlfs,
  • Masatoshi Takagi,
  • Kohsuke Imai,
  • Hidetoshi Takada,
  • Shouichi Ohga,
  • Christoph Klein,
  • Tomohiro Morio,
  • Hirokazu Kanegane

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fped.2019.00015
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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Chronic active Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection (CAEBV) is an EBV-associated lymphoproliferative disease characterized by repeated or sustainable infectious mononucleosis (IM)-like symptoms. EBV is usually detected in B cells in patients who have IM or Burkitt's lymphoma and even in patients with X-linked lymphoproliferative syndrome, which is confirmed to have vulnerability to EBV infection. In contrast, EBV infects T cells (CD4+ T, CD8+ T, and γδT) or NK cells mono- or oligoclonally in CAEBV patients. It is known that the CAEBV phenotypes differ depending on which cells are infected with EBV. CAEBV is postulated to be associated with a genetic immunological abnormality, although its cause remains undefined. Here we describe a case of EBV-related γδT-cell proliferation with underlying hypomorphic IL2RG mutation. The immunological phenotype consisted of γδT-cell proliferation in the peripheral blood. A presence of EBV-infected B cells and γδT cells mimicked γδT-cell-type CAEBV. Although the patient had normal expression of CD132 (common γ chain), the phosphorylation of STAT was partially defective, indicating impaired activation of the downstream signal of the JAK/STAT pathway. Although the patient was not diagnosed as having CAEBV, this observation shows that CAEBV might be associated with immunological abnormality.

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