A20 haploinsufficiency disturbs immune homeostasis and drives the transformation of lymphocytes with permissive antigen receptors | Science Advances
Abstract
Genetic
TNFAIP3
(A20) inactivation is a classical somatic lymphoma lesion and the genomic trait in haploinsufficiency of A20 (HA20). In a cohort of 34 patients with HA20, we show that heterozygous
TNFAIP3
loss skews immune repertoires toward lymphocytes with classical self-reactive antigen receptors typically found in B and T cell lymphomas. This skewing was mediated by a feed-forward tumor necrosis factor (TNF)/A20/nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) loop that shaped pre-lymphoma transcriptome signatures in clonally expanded B (
CD81
,
BACH2
, and
NEAT1
) or T (
GATA3
,
TOX
, and
PDCD1
) cells. The skewing was reversed by anti-TNF treatment but could also progress to overt lymphoma. Analysis of conditional
TNFAIP3
knock-out mice reproduced the wiring of the TNF/A20/NF-κB signaling axis with permissive antigen receptors and suggested a distinct regulation in B and T cells. Together, patients with the genetic disorder HA20 provide an exceptional window into A20/TNF/NF-κB–mediated control of immune homeostasis and early steps of lymphomagenesis that remain clinically unrecognized.