Manz R A, Moser K, Burmester G R, Radbruch A, Hiepe F
Deutsches Rheumaforschungszentrum Berlin, Germany.
Curr Top Microbiol Immunol. 2006;305:241-57. doi: 10.1007/3-540-29714-6_12.
The etiopathologies of autoimmune diseases are complex. A broad variety of cell types and gene products are involved. However, clinical and experimental evidence suggests that the importance of an individual factor changes during the course of the disease. Factors and cell types that induce acute autoreactivity and initiate an autoimmune disease could be distinct from those that drive a chronic course of that disease. Autoreactive immunological memory, in particular B cell and plasma cell memory, contributes to chronicity through several mechanisms. Formation of autoreactive memory B cells leads to an increase in the numbers of autoreactive cells. In comparison to naive B cells, these memory B cells show a decreased threshold for activation. Additionally, a fraction of memory B cells express the chemokine receptor CXCR3, which supports their accumulation within chronically inflamed tissues. This may allow their escape from mechanisms for induction of peripheral tolerance. Within the inflamed tissue, inflammatory cytokines and autoantigens provide activation signals that promote plasma cell differentiation and survival. The autoantibodies produced locally by these plasma cells contribute to the severity of inflammation. Together, an autoreactive loop of autoantibody-induced inflammation is formed. Another integral part of immunological memory are long-lived plasma cells. These cells provide persistent humoral antibody memory. Though not all autoantibodies are produced by long-lived plasma cells, these cells have a special impact on immune pathology. Long-lived plasma cells are relatively resistant to existing therapies of immunosuppression and continuously secrete antibodies, without need for restimulation. Long-lived plasma cells provide titers of autoantibodies even during clinically quiescent phases and after immunosuppression. These persisting autoantibody titers, though often low and not causing acute clinical symptoms, are likely to maintain a low level of chronic inflammation and progressive tissue destruction, which reduces the threshold for another break of immunological tolerance.
自身免疫性疾病的病因病理十分复杂。涉及多种细胞类型和基因产物。然而,临床和实验证据表明,个体因素在疾病过程中的重要性会发生变化。诱导急性自身反应性并引发自身免疫性疾病的因素和细胞类型可能与驱动该疾病慢性病程的因素和细胞类型不同。自身反应性免疫记忆,尤其是B细胞和浆细胞记忆,通过多种机制导致疾病慢性化。自身反应性记忆B细胞的形成导致自身反应性细胞数量增加。与初始B细胞相比,这些记忆B细胞的激活阈值降低。此外,一部分记忆B细胞表达趋化因子受体CXCR3,这有助于它们在慢性炎症组织中聚集。这可能使它们逃避外周耐受诱导机制。在炎症组织中,炎性细胞因子和自身抗原提供促进浆细胞分化和存活的激活信号。这些浆细胞在局部产生的自身抗体导致炎症的严重程度增加。这样就形成了自身抗体诱导炎症的自身反应性循环。免疫记忆的另一个重要组成部分是长寿浆细胞。这些细胞提供持久的体液抗体记忆。虽然并非所有自身抗体都是由长寿浆细胞产生的,但这些细胞对免疫病理学有特殊影响。长寿浆细胞对现有的免疫抑制疗法相对耐药,并且无需再次刺激即可持续分泌抗体。即使在临床静止期和免疫抑制后,长寿浆细胞也能提供自身抗体滴度。这些持续存在的自身抗体滴度虽然通常较低且不会引起急性临床症状,但可能维持低水平的慢性炎症和进行性组织破坏,从而降低另一次免疫耐受破坏的阈值。