MICA: Fundamental Role of Phosphoinositide 3-kinase delta in Infection and Immunity: Insights from a Novel Primary Immune Deficiency Syndrome, APDS

Lead Research Organisation: University of Sheffield
Department Name: Infection Immunity & Cardiovasc Disease

Abstract

As a collaborative group of doctors, geneticists and scientists, we have recently discovered a new inherited disease, which causes increased susceptibility to infection. Affected patients suffer frequent and often severe bacterial infections of the lungs, sinuses and ears, often leading to permanent damage; they can also experience potentially life-threatening viral infections (particularly with the Herpes viruses such as those which cause chicken pox and shingles or glandular fever). Many of the patients die young from these devastating infections. We found that this disease is due to a genetic mutation that causes an enzyme called PI3Kdelta (which is found mainly in the cells of the immune system) to be more active and to 'work harder'. The overactive PI3Kdelta protein disturbs the chemical signals that control how immune cells develop and function in the body.
B and T lymphocytes coordinate the immune system to fight infections. We found that the B-lymphocytes from our patients do not make good quality antibodies (proteins which help to kill invading bacteria), and that their T-lymphocytes (which provide protection from viral infection) also function less effectively. We do not yet know how common the condition is, why the B and T cells don't work properly, or if other immune cells or lung cells are also affected. We also don't know if other abnormalities that affect the activity of PI3Kdelta or related proteins contribute to susceptibility to infection in a more general setting.
It is difficult to study immune cells from the patients, as most of them are unwell children, and because a feature of the disease is that the immune cells die rapidly outside the body. To solve this problem we have engineered a mouse with the same genetic defect, and will study how the immune cells of this mouse work. We will then take the findings from these mouse cells and see if they hold true in patients' cells; this strategy will enable us to use the limited number of patient cells available to us more effectively. We plan to expose the genetically altered mice to the same infections that the patients develop, to find out precisely why they are so susceptible. We will also test protective strategies such as drugs that reduce PI3Kdelta activity (PI3Kdelta inhibitors) to see if they prevent infection or reduce its severity. If this is the case, we will also treat patients who suffer from this disease with PI3Kdelta inhibitors and study the effects of this treatment; we believe such drugs will reduce the inflammation in their lungs and improve their ability to fight infection. Since too little PI3Kdelta activity is also detrimental immune, these medications will need to be carefully titrated, so we will need to monitor the effects on a range of biological markers of PI3Kdelta function as well as infection and inflammation.
This work will determine the role and importance of PI3Kdelta in infection. This knowledge will help not only patients with the newly described disease, but may also give new insights into why some otherwise healthy people are prone to develop bacterial and viral infections. This is of importance nationally and globally, since respiratory infections cause more illness and more deaths than all cancers combined.

Technical Summary

Background
Respiratory infections account for more than 6% of the global burden of disease, causing more morbidity and mortality than all cancers combined. We have recently described a novel combined immune deficiency characterised by severe recurrent respiratory bacterial infections, viral infections and a marked predisposition to B cell lymphoma; this condition is caused by an activating mutation (E1021K) in the gene encoding the catalytic subunit of PI3 kinase delta (p110delta) and has been termed 'Activated PI3 kinase Delta Syndrome' (APDS). We wish to elucidate precisely how augmented p110delta function compromises lymphocyte and myeloid immune cell function, and to explore the potential therapeutic applications of p110delta inhibitors in our patients.

Scientific Objectives.
We wish to establish the importance of augmented p110delta function in susceptibility to infection, to ascertain precisely how increased p110delta-dependent signalling perturbs lymphocyte and myeloid cell function, and to explore the role of p110delta inhibitors in the prevention/treatment of respiratory infection in APDS.

Plan of Investigation
We have generated a transgenic mouse model of the human disease and will use this to explore immune cell function, susceptibility to bacterial and viral infection, and protection from such infections by administration of p110delta inhibitors. In addition, we will undertake an experimental medicine study using a novel inhaled p110delta inhibitor to establish the ideal profile of inhibition needed to restore aberrant immune cell function; this strategy will be guided and monitored by means of a number of biomarkers including sputum PIP3 levels.

Potential Future Applications
This work will generate improved understanding of infection susceptibility at the genetic, biochemical and cellular levels, and will help to clarify the role of p110delta inhibitors in prophylaxis and treatment of infections in APDS.

Planned Impact

Who Will Benefit from this Research?
The overarching aim of the work described in this application is to delineate the role of PI3Kdelta in immunity and infection, and to explore its potential as a therapeutic target in immunodeficiency secondary to excessive PI3Kdelta activity. In addition to the accrual of scientific knowledge, this work may lead to novel diagnostic and therapeutic strategies in patients suffering recurrent respiratory infection, and other consequences of aberrant PI3Kdelta signalling. Given the burden of respiratory infection both within the UK and globally, this research has the potential to have a substantial and wide-ranging impact with multiple potential beneficiaries.
1. Patients suffering from the Activated PI3Kinase Delta Syndrome (APDS).
2. Additional patient cohorts suffering from recurrent infection or other consequences of aberrant PI3Kinase signalling.
3. Clinicians (respiratory physicians, immunologists and others) caring for the above patient groups.
4. Companies with an interest in developing and implementing novel diagnostic and therapeutic agents or strategies in these settings.
5. Government departments planning NHS strategy to implement care for conditions.
6. Academics studying the role of PI3kinase signalling in immunity, infection, inflammation and malignancy.

How Will They Benefit?
Direct benefit to patients with documented APDS is likely to accrue in the short term (within 3 years) as they are candidates for treatment with (already available) PI3K delta inhibitors; the identification of this patient group is likely to drive the development of improved therapeutic agents. The development of a transgenic mouse model will help to characterise the benefits of novel agents and compare them with existing compounds and other strategies such as vaccination. This research may also have implications for respiratory infection and infection susceptibility in the wider setting. There were an estimated 3.2 million deaths worldwide from lower respiratory tract infections in 2010, making this the third commonest cause of death globally, and bacterial pneumonia is the leading cause of childhood mortality worldwide.
This project includes development opportunities for the applicants through collaborative exposure to patient samples, to mouse models, to next generation sequencing platforms, and to novel assays. These skills will be shared among colleagues to support academic development in Cambridge and elsewhere. Methodologies and resources will be shared, to support UK academic excellence, raising the profile of UK-based research internationally.

Publications

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Browning MJ (2015) Cowden's syndrome with immunodeficiency. in Journal of medical genetics

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Göös H (2019) Gain-of-function CEBPE mutation causes noncanonical autoinflammatory inflammasomopathy. in The Journal of allergy and clinical immunology

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Hajdamowicz NH (2019) The Impact of Hypoxia on the Host-Pathogen Interaction between Neutrophils and Staphylococcus aureus. in International journal of molecular sciences

 
Description British Lung Foundation Pump Priming grant
Amount £24,600 (GBP)
Funding ID PPRG16-13 
Organisation British Lung Foundation (BLF) 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 11/2017 
End 11/2020
 
Description Centre for Therapeutic Target Validation CTTV Project Grant
Amount £191,909 (GBP)
Organisation Centre for Therapeutic Target Validation 
Sector Academic/University
Country United Kingdom
Start 09/2015 
End 08/2017
 
Description Determining the role of phosphoinostide 3-kinase delta (PI3Kd) in the pathogenesis and progression of COPD
Amount £284,456 (GBP)
Funding ID R120782 
Organisation 4Ward North Clincial PhD Academy 
Sector Academic/University
Start 11/2019 
End 10/2022
 
Description ERC Advanced grant to Prof Sergey Nejentsev
Amount € 2,160,926 (EUR)
Funding ID 832721 
Organisation European Research Council (ERC) 
Sector Public
Country Belgium
Start 06/2019 
End 05/2024
 
Description ITN PIPgen
Amount € 4,099,075 (EUR)
Funding ID 955534 
Organisation Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country Global
Start 07/2021 
End 06/2025
 
Description Marie Sklodowska-Curie Fellowship for Dr Papapietro, a postdoctoral scientist in Prof Nejentsev's group
Amount € 183,455 (EUR)
Funding ID 657633 
Organisation European Commission 
Sector Public
Country European Union (EU)
Start 05/2015 
End 04/2017
 
Description PhD studentship
Amount £67,563 (GBP)
Funding ID A1872 
Organisation Rosetrees Trust 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 10/2018 
End 10/2021
 
Title E1020K transgenic mouse 
Description The E1020K mouse has been generated as a germline, and also under Cre-drivers specific for T, B and myeloid cells. The biochemical phenotype recapitulates that of the Activated PI3K delta syndrome (ie the mutation has been confirmed to be activating in the mouse). The contributions of the various cell types to streptococol infection have been established. Mice have been sent to another group with an interest in autoimmunity. 
Type Of Material Model of mechanisms or symptoms - mammalian in vivo 
Year Produced 2018 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact We are characterizing the behaviour of T cells, B cells and myeloid cells in further models. 
URL https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6085315/
 
Title PIK3R1 transgenic mouse to recapitulate APDS2 
Description This was achieved under the MRC GEMM Mice of Medicine initiative. Condliffe and Okkenhaug made a successful application and this was approved. We liasided over the complex targeting strategy and although it was a chellenging process the mouse has been generated. Recently the mouse model has been received in Prof Okkenhaugs lab for furhter characterisaion 
Type Of Material Model of mechanisms or symptoms - mammalian in vivo 
Year Produced 2020 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact We need to ensure that the mutation has recapitulated the biochemical abnormality (enhanced PI3Kdelta activation) of APDS2. If this is the case then the model wil help us understand the growth developmental delay and propensity to autism seen in APDS2 
 
Title Zebrafish model of activated PI3kinase delta 
Description We have created stable trasngenic zebrafish lines of 2 mutations of APDS 
Type Of Material Model of mechanisms or symptoms - non-mammalian in vivo 
Year Produced 2019 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact We are currently investigating an unexpected neutrophil phenotype 
 
Title Prospective observational study on natural history, treatment and outcome of patients with APDS - a level 3 ESID registry study 
Description This registry is sponsored by the European Society for Immunodeficiency (ESID) with financial support from Novartis and GSK. It is a prospective study to collect longitudinal data on patients with the Activated Pi3Kinase Delta Syndrome. The database was designed and instrumented by the Principal Investigators, Professor Stephan Ehl (Freiburg, Germany), Professor Alison Condliffe (Sheffield UK) and Dr Sven Kracker (Paris, France). In line with targets, 50 patients had been captured in the database in 2017.The current figure has now risen to 85 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2018 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact patients in the database provide a resource for prospective evaluation of this condition and has also been used for recruitment into clinical trials. An oral presentation was delivered at the European Society for Immunodeficiency (ESID) meeting in November 2017 and as a result a 'Perspectives' article was invited by 'Frontiers in Immunology' which is currently undergoing minor revision 
URL http://esid.org/Working-Parties/Registry/New-ESID-Registry
 
Description APDS2 Pik3r1 conditional mouse 
Organisation MRC Harwell
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Using data from our grant we applied to the MRC Mice for Medicine funding stream to generate an 'APDS 2 mouse' which will be a valulabe comparator to the mouse model geneated in our programme grant. Our mouse has a gain of function mutation in the catalytic subunit of PI3Kdelta (recapitulating the human disease APDS1) whilst the new mouse will have the APDS2 mutation in the Class 1 PI3K regulatory subunit.
Collaborator Contribution We applied for the funding for the mouse and designed the targeting strategy
Impact No outputs yet
Start Year 2018
 
Description Activated PI3Kd in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) 
Organisation VU University Medical Center
Country Netherlands 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Prof Sergey Nejentsev established collaboration with Profs Alexandre Voskuyl and Ronald van Vollenhoven at VUmc in Amsterdam as part of ARCAID (Amsterdam Rheumatology Center for AutoImmune Diseases). Prof Nejentsev now supervises a PhD student in Amsterdam, Ms Elham Mirfazeli, funded by an EU H2020-COFUND grant. She began to study activated PI3Kd in a cohort of SLE patients in Amsterdam. Her preliminary data contributed to the application for the renewal of the Program Grant.
Collaborator Contribution Collaborators in Amsterdam facilitated sample collection in a large cohort of SLE patients.
Impact None yet.
Start Year 2019
 
Description Collaboraations to investigate P3Kdelta in SLE 
Organisation Addenbrooke's Hospital
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Hospitals 
PI Contribution We rrecruited the partners to collaborate on a project to investigate the role of PI3Kdelta in SLE. The concept and preliminary data arose from our Program grant
Collaborator Contribution The Rheumatology Departments at Addenbrookes and Sheffield (lead Jayne in Cambridge, Akil and Kilding in Sheffield) will recuirt patients to the study. Vento-Tormo (Sanger) wiill lead the analysis of single cell RNAseq if the grant is awarded
Impact We anticipate if the grant is funded that we will establish the extent of PI3K activation that contributes to SLE, establish and clinical or biochemical/cellular biomarkers and develop a potential route to personalised themapy in this setting. We have submitted a program grant renewal based on this colaboration
Start Year 2020
 
Description Collaboraations to investigate P3Kdelta in SLE 
Organisation Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution We rrecruited the partners to collaborate on a project to investigate the role of PI3Kdelta in SLE. The concept and preliminary data arose from our Program grant
Collaborator Contribution The Rheumatology Departments at Addenbrookes and Sheffield (lead Jayne in Cambridge, Akil and Kilding in Sheffield) will recuirt patients to the study. Vento-Tormo (Sanger) wiill lead the analysis of single cell RNAseq if the grant is awarded
Impact We anticipate if the grant is funded that we will establish the extent of PI3K activation that contributes to SLE, establish and clinical or biochemical/cellular biomarkers and develop a potential route to personalised themapy in this setting. We have submitted a program grant renewal based on this colaboration
Start Year 2020
 
Description Collaboraations to investigate P3Kdelta in SLE 
Organisation The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute
Department Human Genetics
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We rrecruited the partners to collaborate on a project to investigate the role of PI3Kdelta in SLE. The concept and preliminary data arose from our Program grant
Collaborator Contribution The Rheumatology Departments at Addenbrookes and Sheffield (lead Jayne in Cambridge, Akil and Kilding in Sheffield) will recuirt patients to the study. Vento-Tormo (Sanger) wiill lead the analysis of single cell RNAseq if the grant is awarded
Impact We anticipate if the grant is funded that we will establish the extent of PI3K activation that contributes to SLE, establish and clinical or biochemical/cellular biomarkers and develop a potential route to personalised themapy in this setting. We have submitted a program grant renewal based on this colaboration
Start Year 2020
 
Description Graded inhibition: is the optimal dose the maximum tolerated dose 
Organisation GlaxoSmithKline (GSK)
Country Global 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution With this research agreement we ask the question of whether the maximal tolerated dose of an inhibitor is always the most effective dose. We use immunomodulation by PI3Kdelta inhibitors, using genetic and pharmacological models. This is based on ideas developed during the MICA proposal: "Fundamental Role of Phosphoinositide 3-kinase delta in Infection and Immunity: Insights from a Novel Primary Immune Deficiency Syndrome, APDS > Collaborations and Partnerships "
Collaborator Contribution GSK provides funding for this project. We meet every two months to discuss progress and plan future experiments.
Impact This collaboration is new and has not yet yielded tangible outputs.
Start Year 2019
 
Description SHIELD consortium 
Organisation SHIELD AMR Research Consortium
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution MRC Antimicrobial Resistance Scheme Optimising Innate Host Defence to Combat Antimicrobial Resistance. (£2.8M, 2017-2022); the SHIELD consortium. Professor Condliffe is a Co-Investigator on this award. As a result of my expertise and the work ongoing for the BLF grant, PI3K has been identified as a key priority for this grant. This will facilitate some of the work in the BLF grant and will addtiionally enable us to utilise additional technology such as super-resolution microscopy, which is beyond the budget of the current BLF grat
Collaborator Contribution The techniques we have developed in assessing bacterial killing have informed the high-throughput assays to be adopted by SHIELD.
Impact The collaboration is new and there are no formal research outputs in the form of publications. The collaboration is multidisciplinary involving 1. Microbiologist 2. Basic scientists. 3. Physicist with expertise in super-resolution microscopy 3. Clinicians with expertise in clinical trials.
Start Year 2017
 
Title GSK 204745 
Description As part of our MRC MICA and in partnership with GSK, we have designed a clinical trial of the inhaled PI3K delta inhibitor GSK 204745 for use in patients with the rare primary immune deficiency syndrome APDS (Activated PI3Kinase delta syndrome). The trial is now open and recruiting. Because this is a rare condition, and in the light of new scientific evidence, we are currently applying to extend the age of participation to 12, and to include patients with the more recently described APDS2 (in which the regulatory subunit of PI3K delta is mutated rather than the catalytic subunit) 
Type Therapeutic Intervention - Drug
Current Stage Of Development Refinement. Clinical
Year Development Stage Completed 2015
Development Status Under active development/distribution
Impact We have used the inhaled inhibitor in wild type mice and found that is protected them from infection with Streptococcus pneumoniae. We are currently investigating the signficance of this finding. 
 
Description APDS website 
Form Of Engagement Activity Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Contact from immunologists with possible patients to screen
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2013,2014,2015,2016
URL http://www.apdsyndrome.org/index.php/for-patients/learn-about-apds
 
Description Festival of Science, Sheffield 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Outreach event at Sheffield Festival of Science demonstrating bacterial growth from hand print and cough samples. People who made samples were sent photographs of the bacterial plates
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017