Serum 25-dihydroxyvitamin D levels correlate with CD4+Foxp3+ T-cell numbers in moderate/severe asthma

2012 
impact of B-cell immunodeficiency in cases of PNP deficiency and is probably explained by the complete lack of PNP enzyme activity due to the reported nonsense mutation. Numerous symptomatic mutations, mostly missense, of the PNP gene have been identified. These mutations produce proteins with variable degrees of enzymatic activity, which correlate with the accumulation of nucleoside substrates and, to some degree, with the clinical course. It is the progressive accumulation of deoxyguanosine triphosphate in PNP deficiency that leads to progressive disease. Interestingly, similar to the progressive T-cells toxicity caused by PNP deficiency during the first years of life, the more severe B-cell defect observed in our older patient also suggests accumulating effects of PNP deficiency on B cells. Our results concur with several recent in vitro and in vivo studies describing B-cell death following PNP inhibition with excess deoxyguanosine/deoxyguanosine triphosphate concentrations, albeit at a reduced frequency compared with T-cell apoptosis. Additional studies, including longitudinal studies, are still required to determine whether B-cell function, like T-cell function, deteriorates over time in PNP-deficient patients. In normal peripheral blood B cells, the addition of deoxyguanosine leads to an inhibition of proliferation and differentiation. This effect was found to be independent of deoxyguanosine accumulation. Complete lack of PNP (as observed in our patients) triggers accumulation of deoxyguanosine, thereby disrupting B-cell development, the consequence of which is more profound with time, as indeed was found in the older sister. Another line supporting the hypothesis that the accumulation of deoxyguanosine results in global cell toxicity and that it is not restricted to T cells alone came from the use of purine and pyrimidine nucleoside analogs to treat certain malignancies, including B-cell malignancies. For example, forodesine, a PNP inhibitor, converts deoxyguanine to deoxyguanosine triphosphate and causes general apoptotic cell effect, similar to what is seen in PNP deficiency. We conclude that the variable effect on B-cell function that is observed in PNP deficiencymay be an independent event of T-cell dysfunction and that it is subject to the severity of the deficiency and the duration of the disease. Raz Somech, MD, PhD Atar Lev, MSc Amos J. Simon, PhD Suhair Hanna, MD Amos Etzioni, MD
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