Strobel Stephan
Immunobiology Unit, Institute of Child Health and Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Trust, London WC1N 1EH, UK.
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2002 Apr;958:47-58. doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2002.tb02946.x.
Convincing clinical and experimental evidence suggests that the disturbance of important immunoregulatory and suppressive immunological events induced after oral (mucosal) antigen exposure (oral tolerance) may lead to allergic and autoimmune diseases. Within a variety of factors, age of the host and timing of antigen (food) administration are important characteristics in the development of food allergic disease. Induction of tolerance is seen as a Th2 skewed response, which on one side may prevent harmful mucosal immune reactions but on the other side may contribute to adverse responses in the susceptible individual. The primary mechanisms by which tolerance may be mediated include deletion, anergy, suppression, "ignorance," and apoptosis. Cell-mediated delayed hypersensitivity reactions (Th1), which are implicated in the development of autoimmune and gastrointestinal diseases, are particularly well suppressed. Regulatory events after mucosal exposure of antigen are not well characterized and remain controversial. The balance between tolerance (suppression) and sensitization (priming) is dependent on several factors, such as: (a) genetic background, (b) nature and dose of antigen, (c) frequency of administration, (d) age at first antigen exposure, (e) immunological status of the host, (f) antigen transmission via breast milk, and others. Overall there is evidence in rodents that multiple low-dose feeds are more likely to induce regulatory cytokines (e.g., TGF-beta, IL-10, IL-4) in part secreted by CD4+CD25+ T regulatory cells. Despite the powerful suppressive effects of oral autoantigen exposure observed in experimental models of autoimmune diseases (including bystander suppression), their translation into clinical trials of autoimmune diseases has not yet yielded the expected beneficial results.
令人信服的临床和实验证据表明,口服(黏膜)抗原暴露后诱导的重要免疫调节和免疫抑制事件紊乱(口服耐受)可能导致过敏性和自身免疫性疾病。在多种因素中,宿主年龄和抗原(食物)给药时间是食物过敏性疾病发展的重要特征。耐受的诱导被视为一种Th2偏向性反应,一方面它可能预防有害的黏膜免疫反应,但另一方面可能导致易感个体出现不良反应。介导耐受的主要机制包括清除、无反应性、抑制、“忽视”和凋亡。与自身免疫性疾病和胃肠道疾病发展有关的细胞介导的迟发型超敏反应(Th1)尤其受到良好抑制。黏膜暴露抗原后的调节事件尚未得到充分表征,仍存在争议。耐受(抑制)和致敏(启动)之间的平衡取决于几个因素,如:(a)遗传背景,(b)抗原的性质和剂量,(c)给药频率,(d)首次接触抗原时的年龄,(e)宿主的免疫状态,(f)通过母乳传递的抗原等。总体而言,在啮齿动物中有证据表明,多次低剂量喂食更有可能诱导部分由CD4+CD25+调节性T细胞分泌的调节性细胞因子(如TGF-β、IL-10、IL-4)。尽管在自身免疫性疾病的实验模型中观察到口服自身抗原暴露具有强大的抑制作用(包括旁观者抑制),但将其转化为自身免疫性疾病的临床试验尚未产生预期的有益结果。