Watanabe Ryu, Zhang Hui, Berry Gerald, Goronzy Jörg J, Weyand Cornelia M
Division of Immunology and Rheumatology, Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California; and.
Department of Pathology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2017 May 1;312(5):H1052-H1059. doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.00024.2017. Epub 2017 Mar 17.
Giant cell arteritis (GCA) is a granulomatous vasculitis of the aorta and its medium-sized branch vessels. CD4 T cells, macrophages, and dendritic cells (DCs) build granulomatous infiltrates that injure the vessel wall and elicit a maladaptive response to injury. Pathological consequences include fragmentation of elastic membranes, destruction of the medial layer, microvascular neoangiogenesis, massive outgrowth of myofibroblasts, and lumen-occlusive intimal hyperplasia. Antigens have been suspected to drive the local activation of vasculitogenic CD4 T cells, but recent data have suggested a more generalized defect in the threshold setting of such T cells, rendering them hyperreactive. Under physiological conditions, immune checkpoints provide negative signals to curb T cell activation and prevent inflammation-associated tissue destruction. This protective mechanism is disrupted in GCA. Vessel wall DCs fail to express the immunoinhibitory ligand programmed cell death ligand-1, leaving lesional T cells unchecked. Consequently, programmed cell death protein-1-positive CD4 T cells can enter the immunoprivileged vessel wall, where they produce a broad spectrum of inflammatory cytokines (interferon-γ, IL-17, and IL-21) and have a direct role in driving intimal hyperplasia and intramural neoangiogenesis. The deficiency of the programmed cell death protein-1 immune checkpoint in GCA, promoting unopposed T cell immunity, contrasts with checkpoint hyperactivity in cancer patients in whom excessive programmed cell death ligand-1 expression paralyzes the function of antitumor T cells. Excessive checkpoint activity is the principle underlying cancer-immune evasion and is therapeutically targeted by immunotherapy with checkpoint inhibitors. Such checkpoint inhibitors, which unleash anticancer T cells and induce immune-related toxicity, may lead to drug-induced vasculitis.
巨细胞动脉炎(GCA)是一种累及主动脉及其中等大小分支血管的肉芽肿性血管炎。CD4 T细胞、巨噬细胞和树突状细胞(DC)形成肉芽肿性浸润,损伤血管壁并引发对损伤的适应不良反应。病理后果包括弹性膜断裂、中层破坏、微血管新生血管形成、肌成纤维细胞大量增生以及管腔闭塞性内膜增生。抗原一直被怀疑驱动致血管炎性CD4 T细胞的局部活化,但最近的数据表明,此类T细胞在阈值设定方面存在更普遍的缺陷,使其反应过度。在生理条件下,免疫检查点提供负性信号以抑制T细胞活化并防止炎症相关的组织破坏。这种保护机制在GCA中被破坏。血管壁DC无法表达免疫抑制性配体程序性细胞死亡配体-1,导致病变T细胞不受控制。因此,程序性细胞死亡蛋白-1阳性的CD4 T细胞可进入免疫豁免的血管壁,在那里它们产生多种炎性细胞因子(干扰素-γ、白细胞介素-17和白细胞介素-21),并在驱动内膜增生和壁内新生血管形成中起直接作用。GCA中程序性细胞死亡蛋白-1免疫检查点的缺陷促进了无对抗的T细胞免疫,这与癌症患者中检查点过度活跃形成对比,在癌症患者中,过度的程序性细胞死亡配体-1表达使抗肿瘤T细胞功能瘫痪。检查点过度活跃是癌症免疫逃逸的主要原因,可通过使用检查点抑制剂的免疫疗法进行治疗靶向。此类检查点抑制剂可释放抗癌T细胞并诱导免疫相关毒性,可能导致药物性血管炎。