Mice humanized by syntenic replacement with full-length NLRP3 disease-associated variants model the clinical cryopyrinopathy continuum
Snouwaert JN, Nguyen M, Gabel CA, Aksentijevich I, Ting JP, Koller BH
JCI Insight 11(5) · 2026
Abstract
Next-generation sequencing technologies are increasingly used to diagnose genetic disorders, particularly immunological diseases with broad and overlapping immune dysregulation. Cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes (CAPS) are caused by gain-of-function mutations in NLRP3 and include 3 autoinflammatory diseases spanning a continuum of severity: familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome (FCAS), Muckle-Wells syndrome (MWS), and neonatal-onset multisystem inflammatory disease (NOMID). Linking NLRP3 variants to protein dysfunction and clinical phenotype remains challenging because of genetic modifiers and environmental factors. We report the generation and phenotyping of 5 mouse lines expressing either the common human NLRP3 allele or 1 of 4 CAPS mutations spanning the disease spectrum from FCAS to NOMID. In these lines, the murine Nlrp3 locus is replaced by syntenic integration of the human NLRP3 locus, yielding 1 line with the common allele and 4 lines each carrying a distinct CAPS mutation. Unlike models in which a human mutation is introduced into the mouse protein, these lines recapitulate the spectrum of disease severity observed in humans. These findings support a model in which evaluation of nonsynonymous mutations in mice is optimized when introduced in the context of the human gene. This suggests that species-specific regulation and/or intramolecular epistasis may impact modeling of disease-associated variants.
Key Findings
- ●Five humanized mouse lines expressing common human NLRP3 or one of four CAPS mutations spanning FCAS to NOMID
- ●Syntenic human NLRP3 locus replacement recapitulates the full disease severity spectrum
- ●Species-specific regulation and intramolecular epistasis influence disease-associated variant modeling