Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands; Department of Global Health & Development, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK.
Department of Metabolism, Digestion and Reproduction, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, UK.
Med Hypotheses. 2021 Jun;151:110558. doi: 10.1016/j.mehy.2021.110558. Epub 2021 Mar 29.
Over the past century autoimmune disease incidence has increased rapidly in (post-) industrialised, affluent societies, suggesting that changes in ecology and lifestyle are driving this development. Epidemiological studies show that (i) 80% of autoimmune disease patients are female, (ii) autoimmune diseases co-occur more often in women, and (iii) the incidence of some autoimmune diseases is increasing faster in women than in men. The female preponderance in autoimmunity is most pronounced between puberty and menopause, suggesting that diverging sex hormone levels during the reproductive years are implicated in autoimmune disease development. Using an evolutionary perspective, we build on the hypotheses that female immunity is cyclical in menstruating species and that natural selection shaped the female immune system to optimise the implantation and gestation of a semi-allogeneic foetus. We propose that cyclical immunomodulation and female immune tolerance mechanisms are currently out of balance because of a mismatch between the conditions under which they evolved and (post-)industrialised, affluent lifestyles. We suggest that current changes in autoimmune disease prevalence may be caused by increases in lifetime exposure to cyclical immunomodulation and ovarian hormone exposure, reduced immune challenges, increased reproductive lifespan, changed reproductive patterns, and enhanced positive energy balance associated with (post-)industrialised, affluent lifestyles. We discuss proximate mechanisms by which oestrogen and progesterone influence tolerance induction and immunomodulation, and review the effect of the menstrual cycle, pregnancy, and contraceptive use on autoimmune disease incidence and symptoms.
在过去的一个世纪中,(后)工业化、富裕社会中的自身免疫性疾病发病率迅速上升,这表明生态和生活方式的变化正在推动这一发展。流行病学研究表明:(i)80%的自身免疫性疾病患者为女性,(ii)自身免疫性疾病在女性中更常同时发生,(iii)一些自身免疫性疾病的发病率在女性中增长速度快于男性。女性在自身免疫性疾病中的优势在青春期到绝经期之间最为明显,这表明生殖期性激素水平的差异与自身免疫性疾病的发展有关。从进化的角度来看,我们基于以下假设构建:在有月经的物种中,女性的免疫力是周期性的,自然选择塑造了女性的免疫系统,以优化半同种异体胎儿的着床和妊娠。我们提出,周期性的免疫调节和女性免疫耐受机制目前处于失衡状态,因为它们进化的条件与(后)工业化、富裕的生活方式不匹配。我们认为,目前自身免疫性疾病患病率的增加可能是由于一生中周期性免疫调节和卵巢激素暴露的增加、免疫挑战的减少、生殖寿命的延长、生殖模式的改变以及与(后)工业化、富裕的生活方式相关的正能平衡的增强所致。我们讨论了雌激素和孕激素影响耐受诱导和免疫调节的近因机制,并回顾了月经周期、妊娠和避孕措施对自身免疫性疾病发病率和症状的影响。