Gardiner Clair M, Mills Kingston H G
NK Cell Research Group, School of Biochemistry and Immunology, Trinity Biomedical Sciences Institute, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland.
Immune Regulation Research Group, School of Biochemistry and Immunology, Trinity Biomedical Sciences Institute, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland.
Semin Immunol. 2016 Aug;28(4):343-50. doi: 10.1016/j.smim.2016.03.001. Epub 2016 Mar 12.
Immunological memory mediated by antigen-specific T and B cells is the foundation of adaptive immunity and is fundamental to the heightened and rapid protective immune response induced by vaccination or following re-infection with the same pathogen. While the innate immune system has classically been considered to be non-specific and devoid of memory, it now appears that it can be trained following exposure to microbes or their products and that this may confer a form of memory on innate immune cells. The evidence for immunological memory outside of T and B cells has been best established for natural killer (NK) cells, where it has been known for decades that NK cells have heighten responses following immunological re-challenge. Furthermore, recent studies have demonstrated that monocyte/macrophages, and probably dendritic cells, can be re-programmed through epigenetic modification, following exposure to pathogens or their products, resulting in heighted responses following a second stimulation. Unlike antigen-specific memory of the adaptive immune system, the second stimulation does not have to be with the same pathogen or antigen. Indirect evidence for this comes from reports on the non-specific beneficial effect of certain live vaccines, such as Bacillus Calmette Guerin (BCG) against unrelated childhood infectious diseases. It also appears that certain pathogen or pathogen-derived molecules can prime immune cells, especially macrophages, to secrete more anti-inflammatory and less pro-inflammatory cyokines, thus opening up the possibility of exploiting innate immune training as a new therapeutic approach for inflammatory diseases.
由抗原特异性T细胞和B细胞介导的免疫记忆是适应性免疫的基础,对于疫苗接种或再次感染相同病原体后引发的增强且快速的保护性免疫反应至关重要。虽然传统上认为先天免疫系统是非特异性的且没有记忆,但现在看来,在接触微生物或其产物后它可以被训练,这可能会赋予先天免疫细胞一种记忆形式。T细胞和B细胞之外的免疫记忆证据在自然杀伤(NK)细胞中最为明确,几十年来人们都知道NK细胞在再次免疫挑战后反应增强。此外,最近的研究表明,单核细胞/巨噬细胞,可能还有树突状细胞,在接触病原体或其产物后可通过表观遗传修饰进行重新编程,从而在二次刺激后产生增强的反应。与适应性免疫系统的抗原特异性记忆不同,二次刺激不必针对相同的病原体或抗原。这方面的间接证据来自某些活疫苗(如卡介苗)对无关儿童传染病具有非特异性有益作用的报道。似乎某些病原体或病原体衍生分子还可以使免疫细胞(尤其是巨噬细胞)做好准备,以分泌更多抗炎细胞因子和更少促炎细胞因子,从而开启了利用先天免疫训练作为炎症性疾病新治疗方法的可能性。