Zohar Yaniv, Wildbaum Gizi, Karin Nathan
Department of Immunology, Rappaport Faculty of Medicine, Rappaport Inst. for medical Sciences, Technion, Haifa, Israel.
Front Biosci. 2006 Jan 1;11:368-79. doi: 10.2741/1804.
Antigen specific T cells and B cells recognize their target determinants by antigen specific receptors that are being rearranged in a random manner. These cells then undergo negative and positive selection processes that limit, albeit not eliminate, the escape of self-reactive T and B cells capable of eliciting autoimmune responses. The above processes are referred to as "central selection", and their outcome is the "central tolerance". Auto-reactive T and B cells escaping central tolerance are then subjected to peripheral mechanisms that restrain their auto-aggressive behavior. Different types of regulatory T cells are key players in maintaining actively induced peripheral tolerance. In patients suffering from various autoimmune disorders autoreactive T and/or B cells that escaped central tolerance also circumvented regulatory T cells that could, potentially, eradicate their pathogenicity in the periphery. We have found an additional regulatory mechanism that restrains the harmful activity of these cells at that time. It includes autoimmune B cells that produce neutralizing autoantibodies against numerous inflammatory mediators, mostly cytokines and chemokines, which participate in destructive autoimmunity. These autoantibodies restrain the harmful consequences of inflammatory autoimmune conditions such as in rheumatoid arthritis. Interestingly, this antibody production is elicited during autoimmune diseases, and to a much lesser extent during local inflammation. The specificity of this response is highly restricted to determinants with minimal cross reactivity to other known gene products. Thus, the immune system allows selective breakdown of tolerance in autoimmune conditions. The findings that this beneficial response is turned on by the autoimmune condition, and then regulated by its progression further imply for the existence of a programmed regulatory response of "beneficial autoimmunity". In the current review we describe how this mechanism was discovered in experimental models of rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis, demonstrate its importance in the natural regulation of these diseases, and finally explore its relevance to human diseases.
抗原特异性T细胞和B细胞通过以随机方式重排的抗原特异性受体识别其靶标决定簇。然后,这些细胞经历阴性和阳性选择过程,这些过程限制(尽管不能消除)能够引发自身免疫反应的自身反应性T细胞和B细胞的逃逸。上述过程被称为“中枢选择”,其结果是“中枢耐受”。逃脱中枢耐受的自身反应性T细胞和B细胞随后会受到外周机制的约束,这些机制会抑制它们的自身攻击行为。不同类型的调节性T细胞是维持主动诱导的外周耐受的关键因素。在患有各种自身免疫性疾病的患者中,逃脱中枢耐受的自身反应性T细胞和/或B细胞也规避了调节性T细胞,而调节性T细胞可能在外周根除它们的致病性。我们发现了一种额外的调节机制,该机制在当时抑制了这些细胞的有害活性。它包括产生针对多种炎症介质(主要是细胞因子和趋化因子)的中和自身抗体的自身免疫性B细胞,这些炎症介质参与破坏性自身免疫。这些自身抗体抑制了类风湿性关节炎等炎症性自身免疫疾病的有害后果。有趣的是,这种抗体产生是在自身免疫疾病期间引发的,而在局部炎症期间程度要小得多。这种反应的特异性高度局限于与其他已知基因产物交叉反应最小的决定簇。因此,免疫系统允许在自身免疫条件下选择性地打破耐受。有益反应由自身免疫条件开启,然后由其进展调节,这一发现进一步暗示了“有益自身免疫”的程序性调节反应的存在。在当前的综述中,我们描述了这种机制是如何在类风湿性关节炎和多发性硬化症的实验模型中被发现的,证明了其在这些疾病自然调节中的重要性,最后探讨了其与人类疾病的相关性。