Kamradt Thomas, Volkmer-Engert Rudolf
Deutsches Rheumaforschungszentrum Berlin, Schumannstr. 21/22, 10117 Berlin, Germany.
Mol Divers. 2004;8(3):271-80. doi: 10.1023/b:modi.0000036236.11774.1b.
T helper (Th) lymphocytes mediate critical effector and regulatory functions in infectious, allergic, or autoimmune diseases. Th cells possess clonal receptors that recognize antigenic peptides that are complexed with self-molecules of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) on the surface of antigen presenting cells. An organism's repertoire of T cell receptors must be broad enough to recognize any possible microbial antigen. At the same time, tissue destruction resulting from the attack of autoreactive T lymphocytes that recognize self-peptides must be avoided. It was therefore believed that the immune system could distinguish between self and non-self antigens. This hypothesis was supported by several lines of evidence, including the seemingly exquisite specificity of immune responses. What, then, triggers autoaggressive attacks by the immune system? Clinical and epidemiological observations strongly suggest a link between infection and autoimmunity. A popular hypothesis considers autoimmunity as a side effect of antimicrobial immune responses. Cross-reactive T cells, capable of recognizing both microbial and self-peptides, have been prime suspects as instigators of autoimmunity ever since computerized data base searches revealed astonishing sequence homologies between microbial and self-peptides. Here we review recent data that show a previously unexpected degeneracy of antigen recognition by T cells. It has become clear that each individual T cell receptor can recognize a large number of different ligands. Furthermore, structural criteria rather than sequence homology dictate the antigen recognition process. Thus, the idea that cross-reactivity per se would cause autoimmune disease is most likely too simple. Instead, a variety of different molecular mechanisms dictate the immunological outcome of ligand recognition by T cells.
辅助性T(Th)淋巴细胞在感染性、过敏性或自身免疫性疾病中发挥着关键的效应和调节功能。Th细胞拥有克隆受体,可识别与抗原呈递细胞表面主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)自身分子结合的抗原肽。生物体的T细胞受体库必须足够广泛,以识别任何可能的微生物抗原。与此同时,必须避免识别自身肽的自身反应性T淋巴细胞攻击导致的组织破坏。因此,人们认为免疫系统能够区分自身和非自身抗原。这一假说得到了多条证据的支持,包括免疫反应看似精确的特异性。那么,是什么触发了免疫系统的自身攻击呢?临床和流行病学观察强烈表明感染与自身免疫之间存在联系。一个流行的假说是将自身免疫视为抗菌免疫反应的副作用。自从计算机数据库搜索揭示微生物肽与自身肽之间惊人的序列同源性以来,能够识别微生物肽和自身肽的交叉反应性T细胞一直是自身免疫的主要嫌疑对象。在这里,我们回顾了最近的数据,这些数据显示了T细胞抗原识别中以前意想不到的简并性。很明显,每个单独的T细胞受体都能识别大量不同的配体。此外,结构标准而非序列同源性决定了抗原识别过程。因此,认为交叉反应本身会导致自身免疫性疾病的观点很可能过于简单。相反,多种不同的分子机制决定了T细胞识别配体的免疫学结果。