Otley C, Hall R P
Department of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina.
Dermatol Clin. 1990 Oct;8(4):759-69.
The state of our understanding of the pathogenesis of DH relies on the integration of several key characteristics: (1) a high frequency of the HLA antigens HLA-B8, HLA-DR3, and HLA-DQw2, (2) an associated GSE, (3) the resolution of both the skin lesions and gut abnormalities in response to a gluten-free diet, and (4) the presence of granular deposits of IgA in normal and perilesional skin. The role of the HLA class II antigens expressed in patients with DH most likely relates to the afferent or initiating arm of the immune system. The association of the HLA-A1, -B8, -DR3, -DQw2 haplotype with Sjogren's syndrome, chronic hepatitis, Graves' disease, and other presumably immunologically mediated diseases, as well as the evidence that some normal HLA-B8, -DR3 individuals have an abnormal in vitro lymphocyte response to wheat protein and mitogens and have abnormal Fc-IgG receptor-mediated functions, suggests that this HLA haplotype or genes linked closely to it may confer a generalized state of immune susceptibility on its carrier, the exact phenotypic expression of which depends on other genetic or environmental determinants. It also is clear, from the association of DH with GSE and the ability to control the cutaneous manifestations of DH with a gluten-free diet, that the gut disease is a critical factor in the pathogenesis of DH. Several pathogenetic theories about the origin of the cutaneous IgA deposits in DH have been proposed, one of which states that the IgA is produced in the gut mucosa as a response to a dietary antigen or gut epithelial antigen and then cross-reacts with the skin of patients with DH. A second hypothesis is that the IgA produced in the gut binds to an antigen and is deposited in skin as an antigen-antibody complex. Finally, it could be that the gut mucosal abnormality simply allows an unknown antigen access to the central immune system where an IgA antibody is produced that binds to skin. The failure to detect circulating IgA anti-basement membrane zone antibodies in patients with DH suggests that either the structures to which the IgA binds are not present in normal skin without DH, that IgA cannot bind to these structures in vitro, or that the circulating IgA is too scant for detection with conventional methods. Finally, it must be considered that the IgA deposited in DH skin may bind as a result of non-antigen-antibody interactions that cannot be duplicated in vitro.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
我们对疱疹样皮炎(DH)发病机制的理解状况依赖于几个关键特征的整合:(1)HLA抗原HLA - B8、HLA - DR3和HLA - DQw2的高频率出现;(2)一种相关的谷蛋白敏感性肠病(GSE);(3)无麸质饮食可使皮肤损害和肠道异常得到缓解;(4)在正常皮肤和皮损周围皮肤中存在IgA颗粒沉积。DH患者中表达的HLA - II类抗原的作用很可能与免疫系统的传入或起始环节有关。HLA - A1、- B8、- DR3、- DQw2单倍型与干燥综合征、慢性肝炎、格雷夫斯病及其他可能由免疫介导的疾病相关,并且有证据表明一些正常的HLA - B8、- DR3个体对小麦蛋白和有丝分裂原的体外淋巴细胞反应异常,且Fc - IgG受体介导的功能也异常,这表明这种HLA单倍型或与其紧密连锁的基因可能使其携带者处于一种全身性免疫易感性状态,其确切的表型表达取决于其他遗传或环境决定因素。同样清楚的是,从DH与GSE的关联以及无麸质饮食能够控制DH的皮肤表现来看,肠道疾病是DH发病机制中的一个关键因素。关于DH中皮肤IgA沉积起源的几种发病机制理论已被提出,其中一种认为IgA是在肠道黏膜中作为对饮食抗原或肠道上皮抗原的反应而产生的,然后与DH患者的皮肤发生交叉反应。第二种假说是肠道中产生的IgA与一种抗原结合,并作为抗原 - 抗体复合物沉积在皮肤中。最后,可能是肠道黏膜异常仅仅使得一种未知抗原进入中枢免疫系统,在那里产生与皮肤结合的IgA抗体。在DH患者中未能检测到循环IgA抗基底膜带抗体,这表明要么在无DH的正常皮肤中不存在IgA结合的结构,要么IgA在体外不能与这些结构结合,要么循环IgA太少以至于用传统方法无法检测到。最后,必须考虑到沉积在DH皮肤中的IgA可能是由于无法在体外复制的非抗原 - 抗体相互作用而结合的。(摘要截选至400字)