Cunha-Neto Edecio, Bilate Angelina M, Hyland Kenneth V, Fonseca Simone G, Kalil Jorge, Engman David M
Heart Institute (InCor), Laboratory of Immunology, São Paulo, Brazil.
Autoimmunity. 2006 Feb;39(1):41-54. doi: 10.1080/08916930500485002.
Up to 18 million of individuals are infected by the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi in Latin America, one third of whom will develop chronic Chagas disease cardiomyopathy (CCC) up to 30 years after infection. Cardiomyocyte destruction is associated with a T cell-rich inflammatory infiltrate and fibrosis. The presence of such lesions in the relative scarcity of parasites in the heart, suggested that CCC might be due, in part, to a postinfectious autoimmune process. Over the last two decades, a significant amount of reports of autoimmune and molecular mimicry phenomena have been described in CCC. The authors will review the evidence in support of an autoimmune basis for CCC pathogenesis in humans and experimental animals, with a special emphasis on molecular mimicry as a fundamental mechanism of autoimmunity.
在拉丁美洲,多达1800万人感染了原生动物寄生虫克氏锥虫,其中三分之一的人在感染后30年内会发展为慢性恰加斯病性心肌病(CCC)。心肌细胞破坏与富含T细胞的炎性浸润和纤维化有关。在心脏中寄生虫相对较少的情况下出现此类病变,提示CCC可能部分归因于感染后自身免疫过程。在过去二十年中,CCC中已经描述了大量关于自身免疫和分子模拟现象的报告。作者将综述支持人类和实验动物CCC发病机制存在自身免疫基础的证据,特别强调分子模拟作为自身免疫的基本机制。