- MacDuff, Donna A;
- Reese, Tiffany A;
- Kimmey, Jacqueline M;
- Weiss, Leslie A;
- Song, Christina;
- Zhang, Xin;
- Kambal, Amal;
- Duan, Erning;
- Carrero, Javier A;
- Boisson, Bertrand;
- Laplantine, Emmanuel;
- Israel, Alain;
- Picard, Capucine;
- Colonna, Marco;
- Edelson, Brian T;
- Sibley, L David;
- Stallings, Christina L;
- Casanova, Jean-Laurent;
- Iwai, Kazuhiro;
- Virgin, Herbert W
Variation in the presentation of hereditary immunodeficiencies may be explained by genetic or environmental factors. Patients with mutations in HOIL1 (RBCK1) present with amylopectinosis-associated myopathy with or without hyper-inflammation and immunodeficiency. We report that barrier-raised HOIL-1-deficient mice exhibit amylopectin-like deposits in the myocardium but show minimal signs of hyper-inflammation. However, they show immunodeficiency upon acute infection with Listeria monocytogenes, Toxoplasma gondii or Citrobacter rodentium. Increased susceptibility to Listeria was due to HOIL-1 function in hematopoietic cells and macrophages in production of protective cytokines. In contrast, HOIL-1-deficient mice showed enhanced control of chronic Mycobacterium tuberculosis or murine γ-herpesvirus 68 (MHV68), and these infections conferred a hyper-inflammatory phenotype. Surprisingly, chronic infection with MHV68 complemented the immunodeficiency of HOIL-1, IL-6, Caspase-1 and Caspase-1;Caspase-11-deficient mice following Listeria infection. Thus chronic herpesvirus infection generates signs of auto-inflammation and complements genetic immunodeficiency in mutant mice, highlighting the importance of accounting for the virome in genotype-phenotype studies.