Congenital athymia's clinical symptoms are directly related to the thymus's absence and its incapacity to generate T cells with the necessary immune capabilities. An increased vulnerability to bacterial, viral, and fungal infections results from T-cellimmunodeficiency.[1]
Congenital athymia is linked to a number of genetic disorders, congenital syndromes, and environmental variables. Genetic abnormalities that are either (1) specific to thymic development or (2) related to the development of the midline region as a whole can cause congenital athymia.[1]
Risk factors
Congenital athymia is linked to multiple environmental etiologies. Affected fetal thymus size and other congenital anomalies like renal agenesis and butterfly vertebrae are linked to diabetic embryopathy.[9] It has been shown that babies of diabetic mothers have thymic aplasia.[10]Retinoic acid exposure during fetal development is also linked to phenotypes associated with DiGeorge syndrome, such as hypoplasia and thymic developmental abnormalities such as aplasia and ectopia.[11]
Genetics
The most well-known gene associated with thymic development is Forkhead Box N1 (FOXN1). As a member of the transcription factor family known as the forkhead box gene family, FOXN1 plays a role in the growth and differentiation of skin epithelial cells as well as the development, differentiation, and maintenance of thymic epithelial cells during embryonic and postnatal life.[12][13][14]
The transcription factors known as the paired box family, which control tissue differentiation, includes Paired Box 1 (PAX1).[15] Numerous studies have reported on patients with autosomal recessive otofaciocervical syndrome type 2 (OTFCS2) and mutations in PAX1. Because of altered thymus development, OTFCS2 is associated with a syndromic form of SCID.[16][17]
The two most common genetic syndromes linked to thymus development defects are 22q11.2 deletion syndrome and CHARGE syndrome. Patients with these syndromes exhibit a variety of symptoms because the genes TBX1 and CHD7, associated with these disorders, play a role in the development of the entire midline region.[1] Additional genes that may be involved in healthy thymus development are FOXI3 and TBX2.[18][19]
Treatment
In October 2021, the thymus tissue product Rethymic was approved by U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as a medical therapy for the treatment of children with congenital athymia.[20] It takes six months or longer to reconstitute the immune function in treated children.[20]
^Markert, M.Louise; Hummell, Donna S.; Rosenblatt, Howard M.; Schiff, Sherrie E.; Harville, Terry O.; Williams, Larry W.; Schiff, Richard I.; Buckley, Rebecca H. (1998). "Complete DiGeorge syndrome: Persistence of profound immunodeficiency". The Journal of Pediatrics. 132 (1). Elsevier BV: 15–21. doi:10.1016/s0022-3476(98)70478-0. ISSN0022-3476. PMID9469994.
^ abMarkert, M. Louise; Alexieff, Marilyn J.; Li, Jie; Sarzotti, Marcella; Ozaki, Daniel A.; Devlin, Blythe H.; Sedlak, Debra A.; Sempowski, Gregory D.; Hale, Laura P.; Rice, Henry E.; Mahaffey, Samuel M.; Skinner, Michael A. (15 October 2004). "Postnatal thymus transplantation with immunosuppression as treatment for DiGeorge syndrome". Blood. 104 (8). American Society of Hematology: 2574–2581. doi:10.1182/blood-2003-08-2984. ISSN0006-4971. PMID15100156.
^ abDavies, E. Graham; Cheung, Melissa; Gilmour, Kimberly; Maimaris, Jesmeen; Curry, Joe; Furmanski, Anna; Sebire, Neil; Halliday, Neil; Mengrelis, Konstantinos; Adams, Stuart; Bernatoniene, Jolanta; Bremner, Ronald; Browning, Michael; Devlin, Blythe; Erichsen, Hans Christian; Gaspar, H. Bobby; Hutchison, Lizzie; Ip, Winnie; Ifversen, Marianne; Leahy, T. Ronan; McCarthy, Elizabeth; Moshous, Despina; Neuling, Kim; Pac, Malgorzata; Papadopol, Alina; Parsley, Kathryn L.; Poliani, Luigi; Ricciardelli, Ida; Sansom, David M.; Voor, Tiia; Worth, Austen; Crompton, Tessa; Markert, M. Louise; Thrasher, Adrian J. (2017). "Thymus transplantation for complete DiGeorge syndrome: European experience". Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology. 140 (6). Elsevier BV: 1660–1670.e16. doi:10.1016/j.jaci.2017.03.020. hdl:10547/622087. ISSN0091-6749. PMID28400115.
^Dörnemann, Ria; Koch, Raphael; Möllmann, Ute; Falkenberg, Maria Karina; Möllers, Mareike; Klockenbusch, Walter; Schmitz, Ralf (1 January 2017). "Fetal thymus size in pregnant women with diabetic diseases". Journal of Perinatal Medicine. 45 (5). Walter de Gruyter GmbH: 595–601. doi:10.1515/jpm-2016-0400. ISSN1619-3997. PMID28195554. S2CID4920690.
^Wang, Raymond; Martínez-Frías, Maria Luísa; Graham, John M. (2002). "Infants of diabetic mothers are at increased risk for the oculo-auriculo-vertebral sequence: A case-based and case-control approach". The Journal of Pediatrics. 141 (5). Elsevier BV: 611–617. doi:10.1067/mpd.2002.128891. ISSN0022-3476. PMID12410187.
^Coberly, S; Lammer, E; Alashari, M (1996). "Retinoic acid embryopathy: case report and review of literature". Pediatric Pathology & Laboratory Medicine. 16 (5): 823–836. PMID9025880.
^Wallin, Johan; Eibel, Hermann; Neubüser, Annette; Wilting, Jörg; Koseki, Haruhiko; Balling, Rudi (1 January 1996). "Pax1 is expressed during development of the thymus epithelium and is required for normal T-cell maturation". Development. 122 (1). The Company of Biologists: 23–30. doi:10.1242/dev.122.1.23. ISSN0950-1991. PMID8565834.
^Paganini, I.; Sestini, R.; Capone, G.L.; Putignano, A.L.; Contini, E.; Giotti, I.; Gensini, F.; Marozza, A.; Barilaro, A.; Porfirio, B.; Papi, L. (24 October 2017). "A novel <scp>PAX1</scp> null homozygous mutation in autosomal recessive otofaciocervical syndrome associated with severe combined immunodeficiency". Clinical Genetics. 92 (6). Wiley: 664–668. doi:10.1111/cge.13085. ISSN0009-9163. PMID28657137. S2CID33417887.
^Yamazaki, Yasuhiro; Urrutia, Raul; Franco, Luis M.; Giliani, Silvia; Zhang, Kejian; Alazami, Anas M.; Dobbs, A. Kerry; Masneri, Stefania; Joshi, Avni; Otaizo-Carrasquero, Francisco; Myers, Timothy G.; Ganesan, Sundar; Bondioni, Maria Pia; Ho, Mai Lan; Marks, Catherine; Alajlan, Huda; Mohammed, Reem W.; Zou, Fanggeng; Valencia, C. Alexander; Filipovich, Alexandra H.; Facchetti, Fabio; Boisson, Bertrand; Azzari, Chiara; Al-Saud, Bander K.; Al-Mousa, Hamoud; Casanova, Jean Laurent; Abraham, Roshini S.; Notarangelo, Luigi D. (14 February 2020). "PAX1 is essential for development and function of the human thymus". Science Immunology. 5 (44). American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). doi:10.1126/sciimmunol.aax1036. ISSN2470-9468. PMC7189207. PMID32111619.
^Liu, Ning; Schoch, Kelly; Luo, Xi; Pena, Loren D M; Bhavana, Venkata Hemanjani; Kukolich, Mary K; Stringer, Sarah; Powis, Zöe; Radtke, Kelly; Mroske, Cameron; Deak, Kristen L; McDonald, Marie T; McConkie-Rosell, Allyn; Markert, M Louise; Kranz, Peter G; Stong, Nicholas; Need, Anna C; Bick, David; Amaral, Michelle D; Worthey, Elizabeth A; Levy, Shawn; Wangler, Michael F; Bellen, Hugo J; Shashi, Vandana; Yamamoto, Shinya (2 May 2018). "Functional variants in TBX2 are associated with a syndromic cardiovascular and skeletal developmental disorder". Human Molecular Genetics. 27 (14). Oxford University Press (OUP): 2454–2465. doi:10.1093/hmg/ddy146. ISSN0964-6906. PMC6030957. PMID29726930.