Galili U
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Medical College of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19129.
Springer Semin Immunopathol. 1993;15(2-3):155-71. doi: 10.1007/BF00201098.
Anti-Gal is a human natural antibody which interacts specifically with the mammalian carbohydrate structure Gal alpha 1-3Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc-R, termed, the alpha-galactosyl epitope. This antibody constitutes approximately 1% of circulating IgG in human serum and is produced, upon stimulation, by 1% of circulating B lymphocytes. Anti-Gal is also present as IgA antibodies in body secretions such as saliva, milk and colostrum. The antigenic source for the constant production of anti-Gal seems to be the alpha-galactosyl-like epitopes found on many bacteria of the gastrointestinal flora. Whereas anti-Gal is abundant in humans, apes and Old World monkeys, it is absent from New World monkeys, prosimians and nonprimate mammals. The latter group of species produces, however, large amounts of alpha-galactosyl epitopes (> 10(6) epitopes per cell). It is estimated that anti-Gal appeared in ancestral Old World primates less than 28 million years ago, possibly as a result of an evolutionary event which exerted a selective pressure for the suppression of alpha-galactosyl epitopes expression by inactivation of the gene for the enzyme alpha 1,3 galactosyltransferase. This also resulted in the loss of immune tolerance to the alpha-galactosyl epitope and the production of anti-Gal. The physiologic role of this antibody is not clear as yet. It may participate in the protection against gastrointestinal bacteria. In addition it seems to contribute to the removal of normal and pathologically senescent red cells by interacting with the few hundred cryptic alpha-galactosyl epitopes which are exposed de novo in the course of red cell aging, thereby opsonizing these cells for phagocytosis by reticuloendothelial macrophages. The alpha-galactosyl epitope has been found to be aberrantly expressed on human cells and the interaction of anti-Gal with such epitopes may result in autoimmune disease. Preliminary data suggest such a mechanism in Graves' disease. Anti-Gal has been found to interact with therapeutic recombinant proteins expressing alpha-galactosyl epitopes, but so far there is no indication that it affects the half-life in the circulation and the biologic activity. Detection of anti-Gal in the seminal fluid and in the cerebrospinal fluid may serve as a simple means for assessment of damage to the blood-genital tract barrier or the blood-brain barrier. Studies on the interaction of anti-Gal with aberrantly expressed alpha-galactosyl epitopes on human cells may elucidate the possible role of anti-Gal in human autoimmune diseases.
抗半乳糖(Anti-Gal)是一种人类天然抗体,它能与哺乳动物碳水化合物结构Galα1-3Galβ1-4GlcNAc-R特异性相互作用,该结构被称为α-半乳糖基表位。这种抗体约占人血清中循环IgG的1%,在受到刺激时,由1%的循环B淋巴细胞产生。抗半乳糖在唾液、乳汁和初乳等身体分泌物中也以IgA抗体的形式存在。持续产生抗半乳糖的抗原来源似乎是胃肠道菌群中许多细菌上发现的α-半乳糖基样表位。抗半乳糖在人类、猿类和旧世界猴中含量丰富,而在新世界猴、原猴亚目动物和非灵长类哺乳动物中则不存在。然而,后一组物种会产生大量的α-半乳糖基表位(每个细胞>10⁶个表位)。据估计,抗半乳糖在不到2800万年前出现在旧世界灵长类动物的祖先中,这可能是由于一次进化事件导致的,该事件通过使α1,3半乳糖基转移酶基因失活,对α-半乳糖基表位的表达施加了选择压力。这也导致了对α-半乳糖基表位的免疫耐受丧失以及抗半乳糖的产生。这种抗体的生理作用目前尚不清楚。它可能参与对胃肠道细菌的保护。此外,它似乎通过与红细胞衰老过程中从头暴露的数百个隐匿性α-半乳糖基表位相互作用,有助于清除正常和病理性衰老的红细胞,从而使这些细胞被网状内皮巨噬细胞吞噬而进行调理。已发现α-半乳糖基表位在人类细胞上异常表达,抗半乳糖与此类表位的相互作用可能导致自身免疫性疾病。初步数据表明格雷夫斯病中存在这样一种机制。已发现抗半乳糖与表达α-半乳糖基表位的治疗性重组蛋白相互作用,但到目前为止,没有迹象表明它会影响其在循环中的半衰期和生物学活性。检测精液和脑脊液中的抗半乳糖可作为评估血-生殖道屏障或血-脑屏障损伤的一种简单方法。对抗半乳糖与人类细胞上异常表达的α-半乳糖基表位相互作用的研究可能会阐明抗半乳糖在人类自身免疫性疾病中的可能作用。