Navratil Jeannine S, Sabatine Janice M, Ahearn Joseph M
Division of Rheumatology and Clinical Immunology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine--Lupus Center of Excellence, University of Pittsburgh Schools of the Health Sciences, Biomedical Science Tower, 3500 Terrace Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, USA.
Rheum Dis Clin North Am. 2004 Feb;30(1):193-212. doi: 10.1016/S0889-857X(03)00110-8.
The mystery that surrounds autoimmunity revolves around how the immune system of patients who have systemic autoimmune diseases becomes primed to recognize intracellular antigens, how the autoantibodies thus produced contribute to the pathogenesis of the disease, and how those autoantibodies access their target proteins. By examining the mechanisms that are involved in the normal cellular process of apoptosis, we are beginning to unravel this mystery. The intracellular autoantigen targets of many systemic autoimmune diseases become altered during apoptosis in ways that may change how they are perceived by the immune system. High concentrations of self-antigens, or in the case of viral infection, complexes of foreign and self-antigens, are packaged during generation of apoptotic cells. The packages also may contain altered fragments of self-antigens that have not been encountered previously by the immune system. Under normal circumstances, apoptotic cells are cleared rapidly by macrophages and DCs. The normal consequence of that clearance is that the apoptosis-altered self-antigens are either ignored by the immune system or tolerance to those antigens is maintained. Clearance is achieved through complex mechanisms that enable macrophages and DCs to recognize apoptotic cells as nonthreatening "self" particles. Defects in this process that cause a delay in clearance could change the appearance of apoptotic cells and cause them to be recognized as "foreign invaders," thereby stimulating an inflammatory response that, in turn, activates an immune response to self-antigens. By studying the mechanisms that are involved in recognition and clearance of apoptotic cells, we are uncovering clues to the defects that may underlie the development of systemic autoimmunity.
患有系统性自身免疫性疾病的患者的免疫系统如何被激活以识别细胞内抗原;由此产生的自身抗体如何促成疾病的发病机制;以及这些自身抗体如何接触到其靶蛋白。通过研究参与细胞正常凋亡过程的机制,我们开始揭开这个谜团。许多系统性自身免疫性疾病的细胞内自身抗原靶点在凋亡过程中会发生改变,其方式可能会改变免疫系统对它们的认知。在凋亡细胞生成过程中,会包装高浓度的自身抗原,或者在病毒感染的情况下,会包装外来抗原与自身抗原的复合物。这些包裹物还可能包含免疫系统以前未曾遇到过的自身抗原的改变片段。在正常情况下,凋亡细胞会被巨噬细胞和树突状细胞迅速清除。这种清除的正常结果是,凋亡改变的自身抗原要么被免疫系统忽略,要么维持对这些抗原的耐受性。清除是通过复杂的机制实现的,这些机制使巨噬细胞和树突状细胞能够将凋亡细胞识别为无威胁的“自身”颗粒。这个过程中的缺陷导致清除延迟,可能会改变凋亡细胞的外观,并使其被识别为“外来入侵者”,从而引发炎症反应,进而激活对自身抗原的免疫反应。通过研究参与凋亡细胞识别和清除的机制,我们正在揭示可能是系统性自身免疫性疾病发展基础的缺陷线索。