Posadas S J, Pichler W J
Division Allergology, Clinic for Rheumatology and Clinical Immunology/Allergology, Bern, Switzerland.
Clin Exp Allergy. 2007 Jul;37(7):989-99. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2222.2007.02742.x.
Immune reactions to small molecular compounds such as drugs can cause a variety of diseases mainly involving skin, but also liver, kidney, lungs and other organs. In addition to the well-known immediate, IgE-mediated reactions to drugs, many drug-induced hypersensitivity reactions appear delayed. Recent data have shown that in these delayed reactions drug-specific CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells recognize drugs through their T cell receptors (TCR) in an MHC-dependent way. Immunohistochemical and functional studies of drug-reactive T cells in patients with distinct forms of exanthems revealed that distinct T cell functions lead to different clinical phenotypes. Taken together, these data allow delayed hypersensitivity reactions (type IV) to be further subclassified into T cell reactions, which by releasing certain cytokines and chemokines preferentially activate and recruit monocytes (type IVa), eosinophils (type IVb), or neutrophils (type IVd). Moreover, cytotoxic functions by either CD4(+) or CD8(+) T cells (type IVc) seem to participate in all type IV reactions. Drugs are not only immunogenic because of their chemical reactivity, but also because they may bind in a labile way to available TCRs and possibly MHC-molecules. This seems to be sufficient to stimulate certain, probably preactivated T cells. The drug seems to bind first to the fitting TCR, which already exerts some activation. For full activation, an additional interaction of the TCR with the MHC molecules is needed. The drug binding to the receptor structures is reminiscent of a pharmacological interaction between a drug and its (immune) receptor and was thus termed the p-i concept. In some patients with drug hypersensitivity, such a response occurs within hours even upon the first exposure to the drug. The T cell reaction to the drug might thus not be due to a classical, primary response, but is due to peptide-specific T cells which happen to be stimulated by a drug. This new concept has major implications for understanding clinical and immunological features of drug hypersensitivity and a model to explain the frequent skin symptoms in drug hypersensitivity is proposed.
对药物等小分子化合物的免疫反应可引发多种疾病,主要累及皮肤,但也包括肝脏、肾脏、肺及其他器官。除了众所周知的对药物的即时性、IgE介导的反应外,许多药物诱导的超敏反应表现为延迟性。最近的数据表明,在这些延迟反应中,药物特异性CD4(+)和CD8(+) T细胞通过其T细胞受体(TCR)以MHC依赖性方式识别药物。对不同形式皮疹患者中药物反应性T细胞的免疫组织化学和功能研究表明,不同的T细胞功能导致不同的临床表型。综上所述,这些数据使延迟性超敏反应(IV型)可进一步细分为T细胞反应,即通过释放某些细胞因子和趋化因子优先激活并募集单核细胞(IVa型)、嗜酸性粒细胞(IVb型)或中性粒细胞(IVd型)。此外,CD4(+)或CD8(+) T细胞的细胞毒性功能(IVc型)似乎参与所有IV型反应。药物不仅因其化学反应性具有免疫原性,还因其可能以不稳定的方式与可用的TCR以及可能的MHC分子结合。这似乎足以刺激某些可能已被预激活的T细胞。药物似乎首先与合适的TCR结合,该TCR已经发挥了一些激活作用。为实现完全激活,TCR还需要与MHC分子进行额外的相互作用。药物与受体结构的结合让人联想到药物与其(免疫)受体之间的药理学相互作用,因此被称为p-i概念。在一些药物超敏患者中,即使首次接触药物,这种反应也会在数小时内发生。因此,T细胞对药物的反应可能不是由于经典的初次反应,而是由于碰巧被药物刺激的肽特异性T细胞。这一新概念对理解药物超敏的临床和免疫学特征具有重要意义,并提出了一个解释药物超敏中常见皮肤症状的模型。