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Publication | Open Access

TLR7 gain-of-function genetic variation causes human lupus

521

Citations

47

References

2022

Year

Abstract

Although circumstantial evidence supports enhanced Toll-like receptor 7 (TLR7) signalling as a mechanism of human systemic autoimmune disease<sup>1-7</sup>, evidence of lupus-causing TLR7 gene variants is lacking. Here we describe human systemic lupus erythematosus caused by a TLR7 gain-of-function variant. TLR7 is a sensor of viral RNA<sup>8</sup>,<sup>9</sup> and binds to guanosine<sup>10</sup>-<sup>12</sup>. We identified a de novo, previously undescribed missense TLR7<sup>Y264H</sup> variant in a child with severe lupus and additional variants in other patients with lupus. The TLR7<sup>Y264H</sup> variant selectively increased sensing of guanosine and 2',3'-cGMP<sup>10-12</sup>, and was sufficient to cause lupus when introduced into mice. We show that enhanced TLR7 signalling drives aberrant survival of B cell receptor (BCR)-activated B cells, and in a cell-intrinsic manner, accumulation of CD11c<sup>+</sup> age-associated B cells and germinal centre B cells. Follicular and extrafollicular helper T cells were also increased but these phenotypes were cell-extrinsic. Deficiency of MyD88 (an adaptor protein downstream of TLR7) rescued autoimmunity, aberrant B cell survival, and all cellular and serological phenotypes. Despite prominent spontaneous germinal-centre formation in Tlr7<sup>Y264H</sup> mice, autoimmunity was not ameliorated by germinal-centre deficiency, suggesting an extrafollicular origin of pathogenic B cells. We establish the importance of TLR7 and guanosine-containing self-ligands for human lupus pathogenesis, which paves the way for therapeutic TLR7 or MyD88 inhibition.

References

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