The breakthrough discovery of PAAND is the result of an extensive DNA comparison between the patients’ blood and that of their family members who are not affected by the disease.
The study was led by KU Leuven professor Adrian Liston, who also works at Flanders’ life sciences research institute VIB. Liston’s team collaborated with scientists from the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute in Melbourne, Australia.
The researchers traced the cause to a mutation of a gene known as MEFV. They determined that the mutation tricks the body into responding to a bacterial skin infection, even if there isn’t one. The response causes the skin to produce an inflammatory protein called interleukin-1 beta, which causes skin lesions, fevers and pain.
“If you have the flu, the fever and exhaustion you experience are the result of your immune system putting a lot of energy into battling the infection and not having enough energy left to allow you to function normally,” Liston explains.
With PAAND, he continues, “the immune system diverts much of that energy into fighting an infection that isn’t actually there, with disastrous consequences”.
Only one of the parents needs to carry the mutation for the disease to affect their children, though it isn’t necessarily passed on to every child.