St. Giles Laboratory of Human Genetics of Infectious Diseases, Rockefeller Branch, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY 10065, USA; Laboratory of Human Genetics of Infectious Diseases, Necker Branch, INSERM UMR 1163, Necker Hospital for Sick Children, 75015 Paris, France; Paris Descartes University, Imagine Institute, 75015 Paris, France.
St. Giles Laboratory of Human Genetics of Infectious Diseases, Rockefeller Branch, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY 10065, USA.
Curr Opin Immunol. 2019 Aug;59:88-100. doi: 10.1016/j.coi.2019.03.008. Epub 2019 May 20.
Studies of vertebrate immunity have traditionally focused on professional cells, including circulating and tissue-resident leukocytes. Evidence that non-professional cells are also intrinsically essential (i.e. not via their effect on leukocytes) for protective immunity in natural conditions of infection has emerged from three lines of research in human genetics. First, studies of Mendelian resistance to infection have revealed an essential role of DARC-expressing erythrocytes in protection against Plasmodium vivax infection, and an essential role of FUT2-expressing intestinal epithelial cells for protection against norovirus and rotavirus infections. Second, studies of inborn errors of non-hematopoietic cell-extrinsic immunity have shown that APOL1 and complement cascade components secreted by hepatocytes are essential for protective immunity to trypanosome and pyogenic bacteria, respectively. Third, studies of inborn errors of non-hematopoietic cell-intrinsic immunity have suggested that keratinocytes, pulmonary epithelial cells, and cortical neurons are essential for tissue-specific protective immunity to human papillomaviruses, influenza virus, and herpes simplex virus, respectively. Various other types of genetic resistance or predisposition to infection in human populations are not readily explained by inborn variants of genes operating in leukocytes and may, therefore, involve defects in other cells. The probing of this unchartered territory by human genetics is reshaping immunology, by scaling immunity to infection up from the immune system to the whole organism.
脊椎动物免疫的研究传统上集中在专业细胞上,包括循环和组织驻留的白细胞。从人类遗传学的三条研究线中出现了证据表明,非专业细胞对于感染的自然条件下的保护性免疫也是内在必需的(即不是通过它们对白细胞的影响)。首先,对孟德尔抗感染的研究揭示了 DARC 表达的红细胞在预防间日疟原虫感染中的重要作用,以及 FUT2 表达的肠道上皮细胞在预防诺如病毒和轮状病毒感染中的重要作用。其次,对非造血细胞外在免疫的先天缺陷的研究表明,肝细胞分泌的 APOL1 和补体级联成分对于对锥虫和化脓性细菌的保护性免疫分别是必需的。第三,对非造血细胞内在免疫的先天缺陷的研究表明,角质形成细胞、肺上皮细胞和皮质神经元分别是针对人乳头瘤病毒、流感病毒和单纯疱疹病毒的组织特异性保护性免疫所必需的。人类群体中各种其他类型的感染遗传抗性或易感性不能轻易地用白细胞中作用的先天变异基因来解释,因此可能涉及其他细胞的缺陷。人类遗传学对这个未知领域的探索正在通过将免疫从免疫系统扩展到整个生物体来重塑免疫学,以适应感染的免疫。