Novel insights into the clinical features, genetic spectrum and clonal evolution of patients carrying NLRP3 mosaicism
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Bonet, Nuria; Mascaro, Jose M.; Hurtado Navarro, Laura; Angosto Bazarra, Diego; Callejas Rubio, Jose Luis; Clemente, Daniel; Souto, Alejandro; Lima, Olalla; Palmou Fontana, Natalia; Baselga, Eulalia; Jiménez Treviño, Santiago; Remesal, Agustin; Andreu Barasoain, Marta; Fernandez Dominguez, Luis; Riera Monroig, Josep; Aparicio, Maria; Garcia Herrero, Juan; Pesqué, David; Sanchez Calvin, Maria Teresa; [et al.]Fecha
2025Derechos
Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
Publicado en
Journal of Clinical Immunology, 2025, 45(1),134
Editorial
Kluwer
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Palabras clave
Autoinflammatory diseases
Inflammasome
NLRP3 gene
Mosaicism
Interleukin-1
Interleukin-1
inhibitors
Resumen/Abstract
NLRP3 mosaicism is a well-established mechanism causing the monogenic autoinflammatory disease named cryopyrin associated periodic syndromes (CAPS). The number of reported patients with NLRP3 mosaicism is small, and the knowl edge about the long-term disease behavior is limited. Herein we assembled the largest cohort of individuals with NLRP3 mosaicism reported to date to obtain additional evidence that strengthens the understanding of this disease. The novel genetic data were obtained by using Sanger and next-generation sequencing methods, whereas in vitro analyses determined the functional consequences of detected variants. A total of seventeen individuals with NLRP3 mosaicism were enrolled, with 16/17 experiencing different CAPS phenotypes. An overrepresentation of late-onset forms was detected (37.5%). Overall, clinical manifestations, analytical results, and outcomes of treatments were markedly similar to those detected in patients with germline variants. A large mutational diversity was identified, with 16 different variants among 17 individu als. Two main patterns of mosaicism (extended vs. myeloid-restricted) were detected, with the last one overrepresented in the late-onset group. The evaluation of mosaicism over time identified three different patterns, being the group with stable mosaicism the largest one. Collected evidence supports the marked similarities among patients carrying somatic or germline NLRP3 variants. The overrepresentation of NLRP3 mosaicism in late-onset forms should be considered in patients with inflammatory manifestations starting in adulthood. Analysis of mosaicism at the biological level confirms the two known patterns of corporal distribution and reveals that mosaicism remains stable over time in most patients, but it may also vary during the course of the disease.
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