[PDF][PDF] Human TBK1 deficiency leads to autoinflammation driven by TNF-induced cell death

J Taft, M Markson, D Legarda, R Patel, M Chan, L Malle… - Cell, 2021 - cell.com
J Taft, M Markson, D Legarda, R Patel, M Chan, L Malle, A Richardson, C Gruber
Cell, 2021cell.com
Summary TANK binding kinase 1 (TBK1) regulates IFN-I, NF-κB, and TNF-induced RIPK1-
dependent cell death (RCD). In mice, biallelic loss of TBK1 is embryonically lethal. We
discovered four humans, ages 32, 26, 7, and 8 from three unrelated consanguineous
families with homozygous loss-of-function mutations in TBK1. All four patients suffer from
chronic and systemic autoinflammation, but not severe viral infections. We demonstrate that
TBK1 loss results in hypomorphic but sufficient IFN-I induction via RIG-I/MDA5, while the …
Summary
TANK binding kinase 1 (TBK1) regulates IFN-I, NF-κB, and TNF-induced RIPK1-dependent cell death (RCD). In mice, biallelic loss of TBK1 is embryonically lethal. We discovered four humans, ages 32, 26, 7, and 8 from three unrelated consanguineous families with homozygous loss-of-function mutations in TBK1. All four patients suffer from chronic and systemic autoinflammation, but not severe viral infections. We demonstrate that TBK1 loss results in hypomorphic but sufficient IFN-I induction via RIG-I/MDA5, while the system retains near intact IL-6 induction through NF-κB. Autoinflammation is driven by TNF-induced RCD as patient-derived fibroblasts experienced higher rates of necroptosis in vitro, and CC3 was elevated in peripheral blood ex vivo. Treatment with anti-TNF dampened the baseline circulating inflammatory profile and ameliorated the clinical condition in vivo. These findings highlight the plasticity of the IFN-I response and underscore a cardinal role for TBK1 in the regulation of RCD.
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