4.6 Editorial Material

The human genetic determinism of life-threatening infectious diseases: genetic heterogeneity and physiological homogeneity?

Journal

HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 139, Issue 6-7, Pages 681-694

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00439-020-02184-w

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. INSERM
  2. Paris Descartes University
  3. St. Giles Foundation
  4. French Foundation for Medical Research (FRM) [EQU201903007798]
  5. SCOR Corporate Foundation for Science
  6. Rockefeller University Center for Clinical and Translational Science grant from the National Center for Research Resources [8UL1TR001866]
  7. National Center for Advancing Sciences (NCATS), National Institutes of Health [R01AI088364, R01NS072381, R37AI095983, P01AI061093, R21AI137371, R01AI127564, U19AI111143]
  8. French National Research Agency (ANR) under the Investments for the future program [ANR-10-IAHU-01]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Multicellular eukaryotes emerged late in evolution from an ocean of viruses, bacteria, archaea, and unicellular eukaryotes. These macroorganisms are exposed to and infected by a tremendous diversity of microorganisms. Those that are large enough can even be infected by multicellular fungi and parasites. Each interaction is unique, if only because it operates between two unique living organisms, in an infinite diversity of circumstances. This is neatly illustrated by the extraordinarily high level of interindividual clinical variability in human infections, even for a given pathogen, ranging from a total absence of clinical manifestations to death. We discuss here the idea that the determinism of human life-threatening infectious diseases can be governed by single-gene inborn errors of immunity, which are rarely Mendelian and frequently display incomplete penetrance. We briefly review the evidence in support of this notion obtained over the last two decades, referring to a number of focused and thorough reviews published by eminent colleagues in this issue of Human Genetics. It seems that almost any life-threatening infectious disease can be driven by at least one, and, perhaps, a great many diverse monogenic inborn errors, which may nonetheless be immunologically related. While the proportions of monogenic cases remain unknown, a picture in which genetic heterogeneity is combined with physiological homogeneity is emerging from these studies. A preliminary sketch of the human genetic architecture of severe infectious diseases is perhaps in sight.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available