Role of IL-27 in Epstein-Barr virus infection revealed by IL-27RA deficiency.

Nature 2024
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Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection can engender severe B cell lymphoproliferative diseases<sup>1,2</sup>. The primary infection is often asymptomatic or causes infectious mononucleosis (IM), a self-limiting lymphoproliferative disorder<sup>3</sup>. Selective vulnerability to EBV has been reported in association with inherited mutations impairing T cell immunity to EBV<sup>4</sup>. Here we report biallelic loss-of-function variants in IL27RA that underlie an acute and severe primary EBV infection with a nevertheless favourable outcome requiring a minimal treatment. One mutant allele (rs201107107) was enriched in the Finnish population (minor allele frequency&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.0068) and carried a high risk of severe infectious mononucleosis when homozygous. IL27RA encodes the IL-27 receptor alpha subunit<sup>5,6</sup>. In the absence of IL-27RA, phosphorylation of STAT1 and STAT3 by IL-27 is abolished in T cells. In in vitro studies, IL-27 exerts a synergistic effect on T-cell-receptor-dependent T cell proliferation<sup>7</sup> that is deficient in cells from the patients, leading to impaired expansion of potent anti-EBV effector cytotoxic CD8<sup>+</sup> T cells. IL-27 is produced by EBV-infected B lymphocytes and an IL-27RA-IL-27 autocrine loop is required for the maintenance of EBV-transformed B cells. This potentially explains the eventual favourable outcome of the EBV-induced viral disease in patients with IL-27RA deficiency. Furthermore, we identified neutralizing anti-IL-27 autoantibodies in most individuals who developed sporadic infectious mononucleosis and chronic EBV infection. These results demonstrate the critical role of IL-27RA-IL-27 in immunity to EBV, but also the hijacking of this defence by EBV to promote the expansion of infected&#xa0;transformed B cells.

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