Pendergraft William F, Pressler Barrak M, Jennette J Charles, Falk Ronald J, Preston Gloria A
Department of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7155, USA.
J Mol Med (Berl). 2005 Jan;83(1):12-25. doi: 10.1007/s00109-004-0615-3. Epub 2004 Dec 11.
Autoimmune diseases affect approximately 1 in 21 persons in the United States. Treatment often requires long-term cytotoxic therapy. How and why these deleterious diseases occur is unclear. A serendipitous finding in our laboratory using serum from patients with autoimmune vasculitis led us to develop the theory of autoantigen complementarity, a novel concept that may elucidate the etiological and pathogenetic mechanisms underlying autoimmune disease in general. The theory proposes that the inciting immunogen that elicits a cascade of immunological events is not the self-antigen (the autoantigen) or its mimic but rather a protein that is complementary in surface structure to the autoantigen; that is, a protein homologous or identical to the amino acid sequence of translated antisense RNA from the noncoding strand of the autoantigen gene. The cascade begins when this complementary protein initiates the production of antibodies that in turn elicit an anti-antibody or anti-idiotypic response. These anti-idiotypic antibodies can now react with the autoantigen. Strikingly, homology search of complementary proteins yields microbial and fungal proteins, thus indicating that invading micro-organisms can deliver the inciting immunogen. Curiously, approximately 50% of our patients transcribe the complementary protein's antisense RNA. If it transpires that these aberrant RNAs are translated, the complementary protein would be produced by the individual. Here we review published research investigating complementary proteins, anti-idiotypic immune responses, and antisense transcripts, all of which support complementary proteins as initiators of autoimmune disease. In addition, we provide possible microbial and/or fungal organisms that may incite some of the most studied autoimmune diseases. Lastly, we propose mechanisms by which cell-mediated autoimmunity can be triggered by autoantigen complementarity. Based on our data and the contributions of the researchers described in this review, identification of proteins complementary to autoantigens is likely to be informative in most autoimmune diseases. This vein of study is in the early phases; however, we expect "autoantigen complementarity" is an underlying mechanism in many autoimmune diseases.
在美国,自身免疫性疾病影响着约二十一分之一的人。治疗通常需要长期的细胞毒性疗法。这些有害疾病的发生方式和原因尚不清楚。我们实验室在使用自身免疫性血管炎患者的血清时偶然发现,这促使我们提出了自身抗原互补性理论,这是一个新的概念,可能会阐明一般自身免疫性疾病的病因和发病机制。该理论提出,引发一系列免疫事件的起始免疫原不是自身抗原(自身免疫原)或其模拟物,而是一种在表面结构上与自身抗原互补的蛋白质;也就是说,一种与自身抗原基因非编码链翻译的反义RNA的氨基酸序列同源或相同的蛋白质。当这种互补蛋白启动抗体的产生,进而引发抗抗体或抗独特型反应时,这一系列反应就开始了。这些抗独特型抗体现在可以与自身抗原发生反应。令人惊讶的是,对互补蛋白的同源性搜索产生了微生物和真菌蛋白,这表明入侵的微生物可以传递起始免疫原。奇怪的是,我们约50%的患者转录了互补蛋白的反义RNA。如果这些异常RNA被翻译,个体就会产生互补蛋白。在这里,我们回顾了已发表的关于互补蛋白、抗独特型免疫反应和反义转录本的研究,所有这些都支持互补蛋白作为自身免疫性疾病的起始因素。此外,我们提供了可能引发一些研究最多的自身免疫性疾病的微生物和/或真菌生物体。最后,我们提出了自身抗原互补性引发细胞介导的自身免疫的机制。根据我们的数据以及本综述中描述的研究人员的贡献,鉴定与自身抗原互补的蛋白质可能对大多数自身免疫性疾病具有指导意义。这一研究方向尚处于早期阶段;然而,我们预计“自身抗原互补性”是许多自身免疫性疾病的潜在机制。