PI3K GOF leads to dysregulation of T and B cells that both contribute to extrinsically driving activation and differentiation of other CD4 + T cells
Julia Bier, Anthony Lau, Katherine JL Jackson, Stephanie Ruiz‐Diaz, Timothy J Peters, Robert Brink, Stuart G Tangye, Elissa K Deenick

TL;DR
A genetic mutation in PIK3CD causes immune cell dysregulation in APDS1 patients, with T and B cells contributing to abnormal activation of other T cells.
Contribution
The study identifies that PI3K GOF T and B cells extrinsically drive T-cell activation and differentiation in APDS1.
Findings
PI3K GOF T cells drive loss of naïve CD4+ T cells extrinsically.
Dysregulated PI3K GOF B cells mediate an increase in Tfh cells.
PI3K GOF macrophages and DCs do not contribute to T-cell activation.
Abstract
Activated PI3K delta syndrome 1 (APDS1) is caused by a heterozygous germline gain‐of‐function (GOF) variant in PIK3CD, which encodes the p110δ catalytic subunit of phosphoinositide 3‐kinase (PI3K). APDS1 patients display a broad range of clinical manifestations and perturbations in cellular phenotype. One of the most striking features is the dysregulation of the T‐cell compartment, characterized by an increase in memory T cells, including Tfh cells, and a concomitant decrease in naïve T cells. We have previously shown that many of these changes in T‐cell populations were T‐cell extrinsic and were also induced in WT T cells that developed in the presence of PI3K GOF cells. Here we dissected the drivers of dysregulated T‐cell activation using a mouse model of APDS1. This revealed that PI3K GOF macrophages and DCs made little contribution to the aberrant T‐cell activation. Instead, PI3K…
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Taxonomy
TopicsImmunodeficiency and Autoimmune Disorders · T-cell and B-cell Immunology · Immune Cell Function and Interaction
