Constitutively active Lyn kinase causes a cutaneous small vessel vasculitis and liver fibrosis syndrome
Author
de Jesus, Adriana A
Chen, Guibin
Yang, Dan
Brdicka, Tomas
Ruth, Natasha M
Bennin, David
Freeman, Helen
Martin, Neil
Passo, Murray H
Bhuyan, Farzana
Alehashemi, Sara
Rastegar, Andre T
Uss, Katsiaryna
Kardava, Lela
Marrero, Bernadette
Omoyinmi, Ebun
Lee, Chyi-Chia Richard
Kleiner, David E
Hadigan, Colleen M
Hewitt, Stephen M
Pittaluga, Stefania
Carmona-Rivera, Carmelo
Calvo, Katherine R
Shah, Nirali
Fink, Danielle L
Peterková, Lucie
Biancotto, Angelique
Brooks, Stephen R
Manes, Cameron
Meffre, Eric
Harper, Rebecca L
Kuehn, Hyesun
Kaplan, Mariana J
Brogan, Paul
Rosenzweig, Sergio D
Merchant, Melinda
Deng, Zuoming
Huttenlocher, Anna
Moir, Susan L
Kuhns, Douglas B
Boehm, Manfred
Goldbach-Mansky, Raphaela
Publication date
2023Published in
Nature CommunicationsVolume / Issue
14 (1)ISBN / ISSN
ISSN: 2041-1723ISBN / ISSN
eISSN: 2041-1723Metadata
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This publication has a published version with DOI 10.1038/s41467-023-36941-y
Abstract
Neutrophilic inflammation is a hallmark of many monogenic autoinflammatory diseases; pathomechanisms that regulate extravasation of damaging immune cells into surrounding tissues are poorly understood. Here we identified three unrelated boys with perinatal-onset of neutrophilic cutaneous small vessel vasculitis and systemic inflammation. Two patients developed liver fibrosis in their first year of life. Next-generation sequencing identified two de novo truncating variants in the Src-family tyrosine kinase, LYN, p.Y508*, p.Q507* and a de novo missense variant, p.Y508F, that result in constitutive activation of Lyn kinase. Functional studies revealed increased expression of ICAM-1 on induced patient-derived endothelial cells (iECs) and of β2-integrins on patient neutrophils that increase neutrophil adhesion and vascular transendothelial migration (TEM). Treatment with TNF inhibition improved systemic inflammation; and liver fibrosis resolved on treatment with the Src kinase inhibitor dasatinib. Our findings reveal a critical role for Lyn kinase in modulating inflammatory signals, regulating microvascular permeability and neutrophil recruitment, and in promoting hepatic fibrosis.
Keywords
Neutrophilic inflammation, monogenic autoinflammatory diseases, damaging immune cells, small vessel vasculitis, LYN, p.Y508*, p.Q507
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14178/2044License
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