Weyand C M, Goronzy J J
Department of Medicine, Mayo Clinic and Foundation, Rochester, MN 55905, USA.
J Mol Med (Berl). 1997 Nov-Dec;75(11-12):772-85. doi: 10.1007/s001090050167.
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is an inflammatory disease targeting the synovial membrane and extra-articular tissues. The most feared consequences are significant levels of pain, functional disability, and rheumatoid organ involvement. Molecular investigations of RA have markedly changed the understanding of the pathogenesis although the etiology remains unresolved. Despite the failure of intense efforts to confirm the presence of an infectious micro-organism in rheumatoid synovium, the concept that RA is infectious in origin has continued to be attractive. Theories on the autoimmune nature of RA have benefited from the enormous progress made in understanding the cellular and molecular components of normal immune responses. However, convincing experimental evidence of a joint-specific endogenous antigen in the synovial lesions is still lacking. The viewpoint that RA represents the sequelae of systemic lymphoproliferation has recently been supported by the finding of autoreactive T cells with atypical growth and differentiation behavior. Significant cross-fertilization for the understanding of RA can be expected by studies elucidating cell cycle control and the role of proto-oncogenes. The realization that RA is a genetic disease has had and will have a major impact on investigating pathological events. As in other common genetic disorders, multiple genetic determinants contribute to the risk of an individual developing chronic inflammatory rheumatoid synovitis. Individual genetic elements are seldom mutated or abnormal, but a risk threshold is reached by their accumulation and combination. Genes encoded in the HLA region are recognized as RA risk genes. Recent studies have emphasized that a gene dosing effect for RA-associated HLA alleles is functional, and that HLA polymorphisms act as progression factors rather than as initiation factors in the disease process. These data have challenged the traditional paradigm that disease-associated HLA molecules function solely through their capability to select, bind, and present an arthritogenic antigen. Current efforts focus on identifying the spectrum and nature of genes associated with various RA phenotypes. The future will likely see a broadening of biological systems involved in the pathogenesis of RA with anomalies other than immunoresponsiveness contributing to mechanisms driving articular and extra-articular RA.
类风湿关节炎(RA)是一种针对滑膜和关节外组织的炎症性疾病。最可怕的后果是严重的疼痛、功能残疾以及类风湿器官受累。尽管病因尚未明确,但对RA的分子研究显著改变了对其发病机制的认识。尽管在类风湿滑膜中未能成功证实存在感染性微生物,但RA起源于感染的概念仍然具有吸引力。关于RA自身免疫性质的理论受益于在理解正常免疫反应的细胞和分子成分方面取得的巨大进展。然而,滑膜病变中仍缺乏令人信服的关节特异性内源性抗原的实验证据。最近发现具有非典型生长和分化行为的自身反应性T细胞,支持了RA代表系统性淋巴细胞增殖后遗症的观点。阐明细胞周期调控和原癌基因作用的研究有望为理解RA带来显著的交叉融合。认识到RA是一种遗传性疾病已经并将对研究病理事件产生重大影响。与其他常见的遗传疾病一样,多种遗传决定因素会增加个体患慢性炎症性类风湿滑膜炎的风险。单个遗传元件很少发生突变或异常,但它们的积累和组合会达到一个风险阈值。HLA区域编码的基因被认为是RA风险基因。最近的研究强调,与RA相关的HLA等位基因的基因剂量效应具有功能性,并且HLA多态性在疾病过程中作为进展因素而非起始因素起作用。这些数据挑战了传统范式,即与疾病相关的HLA分子仅通过其选择、结合和呈递致关节炎抗原的能力发挥作用。目前的努力集中在确定与各种RA表型相关的基因谱和性质。未来可能会看到参与RA发病机制的生物系统不断扩大,除免疫反应异常外,其他异常也会导致驱动关节和关节外RA的机制。