McGonagle D
NIHR, Leeds Biomedical Research Unit, Leeds Institute of Molecular Medicine (LIMM), Wellcome Trust Brenner Building, St James' University Hospital, Leeds, LS9 7TF, UK.
J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol. 2009 Sep;23 Suppl 1:9-13. doi: 10.1111/j.1468-3083.2009.03363.x.
The traditional model for psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis (PsA) is that autoimmunity directed against a common skin and joint autoantigen leads to chronic autoreactive T cell driven inflammation. However, recent imaging, histological and genetic studies have challenged this view, especially with respect to joint and nail disease, and provide a broader insight into the pathogenesis of PsA and associated nail involvement. Clinically unrecognized enthesitis (inflammation at tendon and ligament attachments) is commonly seen in early PsA at all sites of the disease. Specifically, enthesitis is associated with adjacent osteitis or bone and synovial inflammation. Even in normal joints, normal insertions are associated with microdamage and inflammatory change, strongly suggesting that local tissue specific, or what has been described as autoinflammatory factors, may dictate disease expression. Distal interphalangeal (DIP) joint disease in PsA is associated with diffuse inflammation that envelops the nail root and adjacent bone. In fact, the nail is intimately linked to entheses, with the extension tendon of the DIP joint sending fibres from bone that envelop the nail root in an interdigitating fashion. Furthermore, the joint collateral ligament enthesis has fibres that merge with the lateral borders of the nail. Other anchorage mechanisms include fibres that directly tether the nail plate to the underlying periosteum, which itself is closely anchored to the extension tendon. The frequent microdamage and tissue repair at normal enthesis attachment sites in healthy joints has resulted in a proposed new model of PsA pathogenesis embracing the concept of autoinflammation, whereby tissue specific factors, including microtrauma, lead to regional innate immune activation and persistent inflammation, as an alternative to primary immunopathology driven by T and B cell abnormalities. Unlike the classical autoimmune diseases, which may attack a completely normal organ, autoimmunity in psoriatic disease is likely to involve tissues where there is intrinsic dysregulation of the target tissues. These tissue specific factors related to the enthesis appear to be key to the phenotypic expression of diseases hitherto regarded as autoimmune. The pathogenesis of PsA, nail disease and to a lesser extent psoriasis therefore appear to have an autoinflammatory (innate immune driven) rather than autoimmune basis. Taken together, these findings are important for better understanding PsA, nail disease and psoriasis, and for conceptualizing the immunopathogenic basis of these diseases and further exploring the role of enthesitis in their pathophysiology.
银屑病和银屑病关节炎(PsA)的传统模型认为,针对常见皮肤和关节自身抗原的自身免疫会导致慢性自身反应性T细胞驱动的炎症。然而,最近的影像学、组织学和遗传学研究对这一观点提出了挑战,尤其是在关节和指甲疾病方面,并为PsA的发病机制及相关指甲受累情况提供了更广泛的见解。临床上未被识别的附着点炎(肌腱和韧带附着处的炎症)在PsA早期的所有病变部位都很常见。具体而言,附着点炎与相邻的骨炎或骨及滑膜炎症相关。即使在正常关节中,正常的附着部位也与微损伤和炎症变化有关,这强烈表明局部组织特异性因素,或被描述为自身炎症因子的因素,可能决定疾病的表现。PsA中的远端指间关节(DIP)疾病与弥漫性炎症有关,这种炎症包围着甲根和相邻的骨骼。事实上,指甲与附着点密切相关,DIP关节的伸肌腱从骨骼发出纤维,以指状交叉的方式包裹甲根。此外,关节侧副韧带附着点有与指甲外侧边缘融合的纤维。其他固定机制包括直接将甲板与下方骨膜相连的纤维,而骨膜本身又紧密附着于伸肌腱。健康关节中正常附着点部位频繁的微损伤和组织修复导致了一种新的PsA发病机制模型的提出,该模型包含自身炎症的概念,即组织特异性因素,包括微创伤,会导致局部先天性免疫激活和持续性炎症,这是由T和B细胞异常驱动的原发性免疫病理学的替代机制。与可能攻击完全正常器官的经典自身免疫性疾病不同,银屑病性疾病中的自身免疫可能涉及靶组织存在内在调节异常的组织。这些与附着点相关的组织特异性因素似乎是迄今被视为自身免疫性疾病表型表达的关键。因此,PsA、指甲疾病以及在较小程度上银屑病的发病机制似乎具有自身炎症(先天性免疫驱动)而非自身免疫的基础。综上所述,这些发现对于更好地理解PsA、指甲疾病和银屑病,以及概念化这些疾病的免疫发病基础和进一步探索附着点炎在其病理生理学中的作用非常重要。