Background:Somatic mutations affecting components of the Ras-MAPK pathway are a common feature of cancer, whereas germline Ras pathway mutations cause developmental disorders including Noonan, Costello, and cardio-facio-cutaneous syndromes. These ‘RASopathies' also represent cancer-prone syndromes, but the quantitative cancer risks remain unknown.Methods:We investigated the occurrence of childhood cancer including benign and malignant tumours of the central nervous system in a group of 735 individuals with germline mutations in Ras signalling pathway genes by matching their information with the German Childhood Cancer Registry.Results:We observed 12 cases of cancer in the entire RASopathy cohort vs 1.12 expected (based on German population-based incidence rates). This corresponds to a 10.5-fold increased risk of all childhood cancers combined (standardised incidence ratio (SIR)=10.5, 95% confidence interval=5.4–18.3). The specific cancers included juvenile myelomonocytic leukaemia=4; brain tumour=3; acute lymphoblastic leukaemia=2; rhabdomyosarcoma=2; and neuroblastoma=1. The childhood cancer SIR in Noonan syndrome patients was 8.1, whereas that for Costello syndrome patients was 42.4.Conclusions:These data comprise the first quantitative evidence documenting that the germline mutations in Ras signalling pathway genes are associated with increased risks of both childhood leukaemia and solid tumours.
We report a novel condition that is probably caused by altered RNA exosome function and expands the spectrum of clinical consequences of impaired RNA metabolism.
Airway dendritic cells (DCs) are key regulators of pulmonary immune responses. However, information is limited regarding the characteristics of airway DCs in human lung diseases.Plasmacytoid DCs (pDCs) and myeloid DCs (mDCs) were analysed using four-colour flow cytometry in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) from nonsmoking controls and patients with sarcoidosis, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) and pneumonia (in the presence or absence of immunosuppression).Compared with controls, immunocompetent patients with pneumonia displayed strongly enhanced pDC counts in BALF. In contrast, pDC counts in BALF from immunocompromised patients with pneumonia were even lower than in controls. This discrepancy was not explained by a different chemotactic milieu in the airways; all patients with pneumonia were characterised by strongly increased concentrations of the pDC-attracting chemokine, CXC chemokine ligand 10, in BALF. Patients with IPF were characterised by normal percentages of DC subtypes. However, the mDCs of patients with IPF were not as mature (CD83-positive) as those of controls. Patients with sarcoidosis displayed a unique increase in CD1a-negative mDCs in the airways. In addition, there was altered expression of costimulatory molecules (increased CD80 and decreased CD86 expression) on mDCs in patients with sarcoidosis.These data suggest that inflammatory diseases of the human lung are associated with a differential phenotype and recruitment of airway dendritic cells.
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