Inherited CARD9 deficiency in 2 unrelated patients with invasive Exophiala infection.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_35AD340D43F1
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Inherited CARD9 deficiency in 2 unrelated patients with invasive Exophiala infection.
Journal
The Journal of infectious diseases
Author(s)
Lanternier F., Barbati E., Meinzer U., Liu L., Pedergnana V., Migaud M., Héritier S., Chomton M., Frémond M.L., Gonzales E., Galeotti C., Romana S., Jacquemin E., Angoulvant A., Bidault V., Canioni D., Lachenaud J., Mansouri D., Mahdaviani S.A., Adimi P., Mansouri N., Jamshidi M., Bougnoux M.E., Abel L., Lortholary O., Blanche S., Casanova J.L., Picard C., Puel A.
ISSN
1537-6613 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0022-1899
Publication state
Published
Issued date
15/04/2015
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
211
Number
8
Pages
1241-1250
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Case Reports ; Journal Article ; Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Exophiala species are mostly responsible for skin infections. Invasive Exophiala dermatitidis disease is a rare and frequently fatal infection, with 42 cases reported. About half of these cases had no known risk factors. Similarly, invasive Exophiala spinifera disease is extremely rare, with only 3 cases reported, all in patients with no known immunodeficiency. Autosomal recessive CARD9 deficiency has recently been reported in otherwise healthy patients with severe fungal diseases caused by Candida species, dermatophytes, or Phialophora verrucosa.
We investigated an 8-year-old girl from a nonconsanguineous Angolan kindred, who was born in France and developed disseminated E. dermatitidis disease and a 26 year-old woman from an Iranian consaguineous kindred, who was living in Iran and developed disseminated E. spinifera disease. Both patients were otherwise healthy.
We sequenced CARD9 and found both patients to be homozygous for loss-of-function mutations (R18W and E323del). The first patient had segmental uniparental disomy of chromosome 9, carrying 2 copies of the maternal CARD9 mutated allele.
These are the first 2 patients with inherited CARD9 deficiency and invasive Exophiala disease to be described. CARD9 deficiency should thus be considered in patients with unexplained invasive Exophiala species disease, even in the absence of other infections.
Keywords
Adult, Alleles, CARD Signaling Adaptor Proteins/deficiency, CARD Signaling Adaptor Proteins/genetics, Child, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 9/genetics, Exophiala, Female, Homozygote, Humans, Mutation/genetics, Phaeohyphomycosis/genetics, Phaeohyphomycosis/microbiology, Exophiala species, autosomal recessive CARD9 deficiency, central nervous system, invasive fungal infection, osteomyelitis, parental unidisomy
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
04/02/2021 19:56
Last modification date
07/07/2021 6:37
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