Severe infectious diseases of childhood as monogenic inborn errors of immunity

JL Casanova - Proceedings of the National Academy of …, 2015 - National Acad Sciences
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2015National Acad Sciences
This paper reviews the developments that have occurred in the field of human genetics of
infectious diseases from the second half of the 20th century onward. In particular, it stresses
and explains the importance of the recently described monogenic inborn errors of immunity
underlying resistance or susceptibility to specific infections. The monogenic component of
the genetic theory provides a plausible explanation for the occurrence of severe infectious
diseases during primary infection. Over the last 20 y, increasing numbers of life-threatening …
This paper reviews the developments that have occurred in the field of human genetics of infectious diseases from the second half of the 20th century onward. In particular, it stresses and explains the importance of the recently described monogenic inborn errors of immunity underlying resistance or susceptibility to specific infections. The monogenic component of the genetic theory provides a plausible explanation for the occurrence of severe infectious diseases during primary infection. Over the last 20 y, increasing numbers of life-threatening infectious diseases striking otherwise healthy children, adolescents, and even young adults have been attributed to single-gene inborn errors of immunity. These studies were inspired by seminal but neglected findings in plant and animal infections. Infectious diseases typically manifest as sporadic traits because human genotypes often display incomplete penetrance (most genetically predisposed individuals remain healthy) and variable expressivity (different infections can be allelic at the same locus). Infectious diseases of childhood, once thought to be archetypal environmental diseases, actually may be among the most genetically determined conditions of mankind. This nascent and testable notion has interesting medical and biological implications.
National Acad Sciences