Institute for Global Food Security, School of Biological Sciences, Queen's University, Belfast. 19 Chlorine Gardens, Belfast, BT9 5DL, UK.
Institute for Global Food Security, School of Biological Sciences, Queen's University, Belfast. 19 Chlorine Gardens, Belfast, BT9 5DL, UK; The Wellcome-Wolfson Institute for Experimental Medicine, Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, UK.
Anaerobe. 2023 Apr;80:102721. doi: 10.1016/j.anaerobe.2023.102721. Epub 2023 Mar 20.
Autoimmune diseases are thought to develop as a consequence of various environmental and genetic factors, each of which contributes to dysfunctional immune responses and/or a breakdown in immunological tolerance towards native structures. Molecular mimicry by microbial components is among the environmental factors thought to promote a breakdown in immune tolerance, particularly through the presence of cross-reactive epitopes shared with the human host. While resident members of the microbiota are essential promoters of human health through immunomodulation, defence against pathogenic colonisation and conversion of dietary fibre into nutritional resources for host tissues, there may be an underappreciated role of these microbes in the aetiology and/or progression of autoimmune disease. An increasing number of molecular mimics are being identified amongst the anaerobic microbiota which structurally resemble endogenous components and, in some cases, for example the human ubiquitin mimic of Bacteroides fragilis and DNA methyltransferase of Roseburia intestinalis, have been associated with promoting antibody profiles characteristic of autoimmune diseases. The persistent exposure of molecular mimics from the microbiota to the human immune system is likely to be involved in autoantibody production that contributes to the pathologies associated with immune-mediated inflammatory disorders. Here-in, examples of molecular mimics that have been identified among resident members of the human microbiota and their ability to induce autoimmune disease through cross-reactive autoantibody production are discussed. Improved awareness of the molecular mimics that exist among human colonisers will help elucidate the mechanisms involved in the breakdown of immune tolerance that ultimately lead to chronic inflammation and downstream disease.
自身免疫性疾病被认为是多种环境和遗传因素共同作用的结果,这些因素都导致了免疫功能障碍和/或对自身结构的免疫耐受失效。微生物成分的分子模拟被认为是促进免疫耐受失效的环境因素之一,特别是通过与人类宿主共享的交叉反应表位。虽然微生物群的常驻成员通过免疫调节、抵御病原定植和将膳食纤维转化为宿主组织的营养资源,是促进人类健康的重要因素,但这些微生物在自身免疫性疾病的病因和/或进展中可能发挥着被低估的作用。越来越多的分子模拟物在厌氧微生物群中被识别出来,这些模拟物在结构上与内源性成分相似,在某些情况下,例如脆弱拟杆菌的人泛素模拟物和肠道罗斯伯里氏菌的 DNA 甲基转移酶,与促进自身抗体谱特征与自身免疫性疾病有关。微生物群中的分子模拟物持续暴露于人类免疫系统,可能参与了导致与免疫介导的炎症性疾病相关的病理的自身抗体产生。本文讨论了在人类微生物群的常驻成员中已鉴定出的分子模拟物及其通过交叉反应性自身抗体产生诱导自身免疫性疾病的能力。提高对人类定植者中存在的分子模拟物的认识,将有助于阐明导致免疫耐受失效的机制,而免疫耐受失效最终导致慢性炎症和下游疾病。