中文版 | English
Title

A20 haploinsufficiency caused by loss-of-function TNFAIP3 mutation likely leads to progression of antiphospholipid syndrome to marginal zone lymphomas following coronavirus disease 2019 vaccination: A case study

Author
Corresponding AuthorNie,Liping; Ji,Ling; Liang,Chao
Publication Years
2023-04-01
DOI
Source Title
EISSN
2768-0622
Volume3Issue:2
Abstract
Antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) is a rare autoimmune systemic disorder. Previously, no report suggests that APS could progress to extranodal marginal zone lymphomas (EMZL). In this study, we met an unusual APS patient with such progression to EMZL. The patients had been diagnosed with APS two years ago and was in a stable condition after regular treatment until his readmission to our hospital and re-diagnosed with EMZL recently. Coincidentally, we noticed that the patient had been immunized against inactivated COVID-19 vaccine just 2 days before his readmission. Furthermore, we performed whole-exome sequencing and identified a heterozygous, new variant in TNFAIP3 (tumor necrosis factor, α-induced protein 3) which encoded A20 protein, a key molecule controlling NF-κB signaling. This variation caused a loss of a base A in TNFAIP3 gene at position 443_444, leading to a frameshift mutation and the production of a truncated A20 Lys148fs*67. A20 Lys148fs*67 failed to suppress TNF-α-induced NF-κB activation and might act through haploinsufficiency. Vaccines work by triggering an immune response to a virus or bacterium within the body. A20 negatively regulates NF-κB signaling to protect immune system from overactivation. In our case, the newly identified mutation in the TNFAIP3 led to the production of a loss-of-function A20 Lys148fs*67, which lost the ability to inhibit inflammation. The patient with such a heterozygous mutation, when facing with the “second hit” of COVID-19 vaccination challenge, might produce excessive amounts of inflammatory cytokines and formed "cytokine storm" duo to A20 haploinsufficiency, eventually leading to the progression from APS to EMZL.
URL[Source Record]
Language
English
SUSTech Authorship
Corresponding
Funding Project
Guangdong Science and Technology Department[2020A1515011450];Department of Education of Guangdong Province[2021KTSCX104];Guangdong Science and Technology Department[2022A1515012164];Guangdong Science and Technology Department[2023A1515012000];National Natural Science Foundation of China[81922081];National Natural Science Foundation of China[82100943];National Natural Science Foundation of China[82104216];National Natural Science Foundation of China[82172386];Science, Technology and Innovation Commission of Shenzhen Municipality[JCYJ20190809094007719];Science, Technology and Innovation Commission of Shenzhen Municipality[JCYJ20190809095203586];Science, Technology and Innovation Commission of Shenzhen Municipality[JCYJ20210324104201005];Science, Technology and Innovation Commission of Shenzhen Municipality[JCYJ20220530115006014];
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85165503040
Data Source
Scopus
Citation statistics
Cited Times [WOS]:0
Document TypeJournal Article
Identifierhttp://kc.sustech.edu.cn/handle/2SGJ60CL/560001
DepartmentDepartment of Biology
生命科学学院
Affiliation
1.Department of Laboratory Medicine,Peking University Shenzhen Hospital,Shenzhen,China
2.Department of Biology,School of Life Sciences,Southern University of Science and Technology,Shenzhen,China
3.Department of Hematology,Peking University Shenzhen Hospital,Shenzhen,China
4.Institute of Integrated Bioinfomedicine and Translational Science (IBTS),School of Chinese Medicine,Hong Kong Baptist University,Hong Kong
5.State Key Laboratory of Proteomics,National Center for Protein Sciences (Beijing),Beijing Institute of Lifeomics,Beijing,China
Corresponding Author AffilicationDepartment of Biology;  School of Life Sciences
Recommended Citation
GB/T 7714
Li,Jie,Fu,Xuekun,Xu,Haichan,et al. A20 haploinsufficiency caused by loss-of-function TNFAIP3 mutation likely leads to progression of antiphospholipid syndrome to marginal zone lymphomas following coronavirus disease 2019 vaccination: A case study[J]. Clinical and Translational Discovery,2023,3(2).
APA
Li,Jie.,Fu,Xuekun.,Xu,Haichan.,Li,Bowen.,Nie,Liping.,...&Liang,Chao.(2023).A20 haploinsufficiency caused by loss-of-function TNFAIP3 mutation likely leads to progression of antiphospholipid syndrome to marginal zone lymphomas following coronavirus disease 2019 vaccination: A case study.Clinical and Translational Discovery,3(2).
MLA
Li,Jie,et al."A20 haploinsufficiency caused by loss-of-function TNFAIP3 mutation likely leads to progression of antiphospholipid syndrome to marginal zone lymphomas following coronavirus disease 2019 vaccination: A case study".Clinical and Translational Discovery 3.2(2023).
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
Related Services
Fulltext link
Recommend this item
Bookmark
Usage statistics
Export to Endnote
Export to Excel
Export to Csv
Altmetrics Score
Google Scholar
Similar articles in Google Scholar
[Li,Jie]'s Articles
[Fu,Xuekun]'s Articles
[Xu,Haichan]'s Articles
Baidu Scholar
Similar articles in Baidu Scholar
[Li,Jie]'s Articles
[Fu,Xuekun]'s Articles
[Xu,Haichan]'s Articles
Bing Scholar
Similar articles in Bing Scholar
[Li,Jie]'s Articles
[Fu,Xuekun]'s Articles
[Xu,Haichan]'s Articles
Terms of Use
No data!
Social Bookmark/Share
No comment.

Items in the repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.