Strober Warren, Asano Naoki, Fuss Ivan, Kitani Atsushi, Watanabe Tomohiro
Mucosal Immunity Section, LHD, NIAID, NIH, Bethesda, MD, USA.
Immunol Rev. 2014 Jul;260(1):249-60. doi: 10.1111/imr.12193.
The discovery that polymorphisms in the NOD2 (nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain containing 2) gene are associated with a greatly increased risk for the development of Crohn's disease has provided a means to achieve a deeper understanding of the dysregulation of mucosal immune responses to the commensal intestinal organisms that is thought to underlie this disease. NOD2 is a NOD-like receptor (NLR) family member that senses and responds to bacterial wall peptides; thus, the most widely held view of the relation of the NOD2 polymorphisms with Crohn's disease is that these polymorphisms lead to deficient immune responses to gut bacteria, and these, in turn, lead to quantitative or qualitative changes in the bacterial population in the gut lumen or lamina propria that cause inflammation at this site. Initially, this view was based mainly on the observation that defective NOD2 function can result in reduced α-defensin production by intestinal Paneth cells and that such impairment leads to loss of host defense against gut bacteria. In this review, we reconsider this possibility and marshal evidence that it is not in fact likely to be a prime element of Crohn's disease causation. More recently, evidence has been accumulating that the NOD2 dysfunction leads to Crohn's inflammation by inducing changes in the gut microbiome that influence immune effector or regulatory function. We review the strengths and weaknesses of this emerging hypothesis. Finally, we consider the possibility that NOD2 dysfunction can lead to inflammation because of a second and somewhat overlooked aspect of its function, that as an immunoregulator of innate immune responses. In particular, we review the body of evidence that NOD2 stimulation activates a cross-tolerance response that downregulates and thus prevents excessive TLR responses that cause Crohn's inflammation.
核苷酸结合寡聚化结构域包含2(NOD2)基因多态性与克罗恩病发生风险大幅增加相关这一发现,为更深入理解对共生肠道微生物的黏膜免疫反应失调(被认为是该疾病的基础)提供了一种手段。NOD2是一种核苷酸结合寡聚化结构域样受体(NLR)家族成员,可感知并响应细菌壁肽;因此,关于NOD2多态性与克罗恩病关系最广泛的观点是,这些多态性导致对肠道细菌的免疫反应不足,进而导致肠腔或固有层细菌种群数量或质量发生变化,从而在此部位引发炎症。最初,这一观点主要基于以下观察结果:NOD2功能缺陷可导致肠道潘氏细胞产生α-防御素减少,而这种损害会导致宿主对肠道细菌的防御能力丧失。在本综述中,我们重新审视了这种可能性,并整理了证据表明它实际上不太可能是克罗恩病病因的主要因素。最近,越来越多的证据表明,NOD2功能障碍通过诱导影响免疫效应或调节功能的肠道微生物群变化导致克罗恩病炎症。我们回顾了这一新兴假说的优缺点。最后,我们考虑了NOD2功能障碍可能由于其功能的第二个且有点被忽视的方面(即作为先天免疫反应的免疫调节因子)而导致炎症的可能性。特别是,我们回顾了一系列证据,表明NOD2刺激激活了一种交叉耐受反应,该反应下调并因此防止了导致克罗恩病炎症的过度Toll样受体(TLR)反应。