Tompkins W A
North Carolina State University, Raleigh 27606, USA.
J Interferon Cytokine Res. 1999 Aug;19(8):817-28. doi: 10.1089/107999099313325.
It is now well accepted that type 1 interferons (IFNs), IFN-alpha and IFN-beta, in addition to being molecules with powerful antiviral activity, play a critical role in modulating immune responses to foreign and self-antigens. This review of the literature documents the immunomodulatory effects of IFN-alpha and discusses its position and importance in the cytokine cascade. In addition, this review attempts to organize the literature describing local and systemic immunomodulatory effects of orally administered low doses of IFN-alpha, and provide a physiological explanation for the mechanism of action. Evidence suggests that, early in the process of antigen presentation to T helper (Th) cells, IFN-alpha derived principally from the antigen-presenting cells (APC) provides an important signal for Th precursor differentiation in favor of a Th1 immune response. IFN-alpha, perhaps via upregulation of the high-alphaffinity interleukin-12beta1/beta2 (IL-12beta1/beta2) receptor, renders Th1 cells responsive to IL-12 resulting in production of high levels of IFN-gamma crucial to the development of Th1 immune responses. In addition to being instrumental in the development of Th1 immune responses, IFN-alpha appears to be the major cytokine responsible for the amplification of the CD8+ T cell response and resistance to viral infections. Orally administered IFN-alpha induces similar Th1 cytokine responses in buccal mucosal lymph nodes (LN), including upregulation of IFN-gamma expression and downregulation of IL-4. Moreover, reports of systemic immune effects such as decreased autoimmune responses, increased antiviral and antibacterial responses, and generalized immune function changes after oral IFN-alpha administration are consistent with the known immunomodulatory role of IFN-alpha in a physiological setting. Responses to orally administered low doses of IFN-alpha also adhere to the principle of low-dose priming and high-dose anergy that dictates the cellular and cytokine responses to exogenously added cytokines both in vivo and in vitro. These observations collectively suggest that IFN-alpha administered to mucosal-associated immune tissue replicates the known physiological role of IFN-alpha, including regulation of CD4+ Th1 immunomodulatory cells and activation of CD8+ effector cells, which are both crucial to development of protective immune responses. What remains to be determined is how local mucosal immune responses to IFN-alpha given orally are translated into systemic immune responses and resistance to disease. This important question, the answer to which will have profound implications for new immunotherapies for immune-based diseases, is the focus of current research.
目前人们普遍认为,1型干扰素(IFN),即IFN-α和IFN-β,除了是具有强大抗病毒活性的分子外,在调节对外源和自身抗原的免疫反应中也起着关键作用。本文献综述记录了IFN-α的免疫调节作用,并讨论了其在细胞因子级联反应中的地位和重要性。此外,本综述试图整理描述口服低剂量IFN-α的局部和全身免疫调节作用的文献,并为其作用机制提供生理学解释。有证据表明,在抗原呈递给辅助性T(Th)细胞的过程早期,主要来源于抗原呈递细胞(APC)的IFN-α为Th前体向有利于Th1免疫反应的方向分化提供了重要信号。IFN-α可能通过上调高亲和力白细胞介素-12β1/β2(IL-12β1/β2)受体,使Th1细胞对IL-12产生反应,从而导致产生高水平的IFN-γ,这对Th1免疫反应的发展至关重要。除了在Th1免疫反应的发展中发挥作用外,IFN-α似乎还是负责放大CD8+T细胞反应和抵抗病毒感染的主要细胞因子。口服IFN-α在颊黏膜淋巴结(LN)中诱导类似的Th1细胞因子反应,包括上调IFN-γ表达和下调IL-4。此外,关于口服IFN-α后出现的全身免疫效应的报道,如自身免疫反应降低、抗病毒和抗菌反应增强以及全身免疫功能改变,与IFN-α在生理环境中已知的免疫调节作用一致。对口服低剂量IFN-α的反应也遵循低剂量启动和高剂量无反应的原则,这一原则决定了体内和体外细胞及细胞因子对外源添加细胞因子的反应。这些观察结果共同表明,给予黏膜相关免疫组织的IFN-α复制了IFN-α已知的生理作用,包括调节CD4+Th1免疫调节细胞和激活CD8+效应细胞,这两者对保护性免疫反应的发展都至关重要。有待确定的是,口服IFN-α后局部黏膜免疫反应如何转化为全身免疫反应和对疾病的抵抗力。这个重要问题的答案将对基于免疫的疾病的新免疫疗法产生深远影响,是当前研究的重点。