Center for Autoimmune Diseases Research (CREA), School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Universidad del Rosario, Bogota, Colombia; Doctoral Program in Biomedical Sciences, Universidad del Rosario, Bogota, Colombia.
Center for Autoimmune Diseases Research (CREA), School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Universidad del Rosario, Bogota, Colombia.
J Autoimmun. 2018 Dec;95:100-123. doi: 10.1016/j.jaut.2018.10.012. Epub 2018 Oct 26.
Molecular mimicry is one of the leading mechanisms by which infectious or chemical agents may induce autoimmunity. It occurs when similarities between foreign and self-peptides favor an activation of autoreactive T or B cells by a foreign-derived antigen in a susceptible individual. However, molecular mimicry is unlikely to be the only underlying mechanism for autoimmune responses; other factors such as breach in central tolerance, non-specific bystander activation, or persistent antigenic stimuli (amongst others) may also contribute to the development of autoimmune diseases. Host genetics, exposure to microbiota and environmental chemicals are additional links to our understanding of molecular mimicry. Our current knowledge of the detailed mechanisms of molecular mimicry is limited by the issues of prolonged periods of latency before the appearance of disease, the lack of enough statistical power in epidemiological studies, the limitations of the potential role of genetics in human studies, the relevance of inbred murine models to the diverse human population and especially the limited technology to systematically dissect the human T-cell repertoire and B-cell responses. Nevertheless, studies on the role of autoreactive T-cells that are generated secondary to molecular mimicry, the diversity of the T-cell receptor repertoires of auto-reactive T-cells, the role of exposure to cryptic antigens, the generation of autoimmune B-cell responses, the interaction of microbiota and chemical adjuvants with the host immune systems all provide clues in advancing our understanding of the molecular mechanisms involved in the evolving concept of molecular mimicry and also may potentially aid in the prevention and treatment of autoimmune diseases.
分子模拟是传染性或化学制剂引起自身免疫的主要机制之一。当外来和自身肽之间的相似性有利于易感个体中外来抗原激活自身反应性 T 或 B 细胞时,就会发生这种情况。然而,分子模拟不太可能是自身免疫反应的唯一潜在机制;其他因素,如中枢耐受的破坏、非特异性旁观者激活或持续的抗原刺激(以及其他因素)也可能导致自身免疫性疾病的发展。宿主遗传学、暴露于微生物群和环境化学物质是我们理解分子模拟的额外联系。我们目前对分子模拟详细机制的了解受到以下因素的限制:疾病出现前潜伏期长、流行病学研究中统计能力不足、遗传学在人类研究中潜在作用的局限性、近交鼠模型与多样化的人类群体的相关性以及系统剖析人类 T 细胞库和 B 细胞反应的技术有限。尽管如此,对继发于分子模拟的自身反应性 T 细胞的作用、自身反应性 T 细胞的 T 细胞受体库的多样性、隐匿性抗原暴露的作用、自身抗体 B 细胞反应的产生、微生物群和化学佐剂与宿主免疫系统的相互作用的研究都为深入了解分子模拟这一不断发展的概念所涉及的分子机制提供了线索,也可能有助于预防和治疗自身免疫性疾病。