Department of Pathology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, NRB Room 752N, 77 Avenue Louis Pasteur, Boston, MA, USA.
Cardiovasc Res. 2019 Apr 15;115(5):869-877. doi: 10.1093/cvr/cvz025.
T lymphocyte-mediated immune responses in the heart are potentially dangerous because they can interfere with the electromechanical function. Furthermore, the myocardium has limited regenerative capacity to repair damage caused by effector T cells. Myocardial T cell responses are normally suppressed by multiple mechanisms of central and peripheral tolerance. T cell inhibitory molecules, so called immune checkpoints, limit the activation and effector function of heart antigen-reactive T cells that escape deletion during development in the thymus. Programmed cell protein death-1 (PD-1) and cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein-4 (CTLA-4) are checkpoint molecules homologous to the costimulatory receptor CD28, and they work to block activating signals from the T cell antigen receptor and CD28. Nonetheless, PD-1 and CTLA-4 function in different ways and at different steps in a T cell response to antigen. Studies in mice have established that genetic deficiencies of checkpoint molecules, including PD-1, PD-L1, CTLA-4, and lymphocyte activation gene-3, result in enhanced risk of autoimmune T cell-mediated myocarditis and increased pathogenicity of heart antigen-specific effector T cells. The PD-1/PD-L1 pathway appears to be particularly important in cardiac protection from T cells. PD-L1 is markedly up-regulated on myocardial cells by interferon-gamma secreted by T cells and PD-1 or PD-L1 deficiency synergizes with other defects in immune regulation in promoting myocarditis. Consistent with these studies, myocarditis has emerged as a serious adverse reaction of cancer therapies that target checkpoint molecules to enhance anti-tumour T cell responses. Histopathology and immunohistochemical analyses of myocardial tissue from immune checkpoint blockade (ICB)-treated patients echoes findings in checkpoint-deficient mice. Many questions about myocarditis in the setting of cancer immunotherapy still need to be answered, including the nature of the target antigens, genetic risk factors, and variations in the disease with combined therapies. Addressing these questions will require further immunological analyses of blood and heart tissue from patients treated with ICB.
T 淋巴细胞介导的心脏免疫反应可能是危险的,因为它们会干扰机电功能。此外,心肌修复效应 T 细胞引起的损伤的再生能力有限。心脏 T 细胞反应通常受到中枢和外周耐受的多种机制的抑制。T 细胞抑制分子,即所谓的免疫检查点,限制了在胸腺中发育过程中逃脱删除的心脏抗原反应性 T 细胞的激活和效应功能。程序性细胞死亡蛋白-1(PD-1)和细胞毒性 T 淋巴细胞相关蛋白-4(CTLA-4)是与共刺激受体 CD28 同源的检查点分子,它们的作用是阻断 T 细胞抗原受体和 CD28 的激活信号。尽管如此,PD-1 和 CTLA-4 在 T 细胞对抗原的反应中以不同的方式和不同的步骤发挥作用。在小鼠中的研究已经确定,包括 PD-1、PD-L1、CTLA-4 和淋巴细胞激活基因-3 在内的检查点分子的遗传缺陷会导致自身免疫性 T 细胞介导的心肌炎风险增加,并增加心脏抗原特异性效应 T 细胞的致病性。PD-1/PD-L1 途径似乎在心脏保护免受 T 细胞方面特别重要。干扰素-γ由 T 细胞分泌,可显著上调心肌细胞上的 PD-L1,PD-1 或 PD-L1 缺陷与免疫调节的其他缺陷协同作用,促进心肌炎。与这些研究一致,心肌炎已成为针对检查点分子以增强抗肿瘤 T 细胞反应的癌症治疗的严重不良反应。免疫检查点阻断(ICB)治疗患者的心肌组织的组织病理学和免疫组织化学分析与检查点缺陷小鼠的发现一致。癌症免疫治疗中心肌炎的许多问题仍需解答,包括靶抗原的性质、遗传风险因素以及联合治疗中的疾病变化。回答这些问题需要对接受 ICB 治疗的患者的血液和心脏组织进行进一步的免疫分析。