| Literature DB >> 15743493 |
David N Posnett1, Dmitry Yarilin.
Abstract
Reports of infection with certain chronic persistent microbes (herpesviruses or Chlamydiae) in human autoimmune diseases are consistent with the hypothesis that these microbes are reactivated in the setting of immunodeficiency and often target the site of autoimmune inflammation. New experimental animal models demonstrate the principle. A herpesvirus or Chlamydia species can be used to infect mice with induced transient autoimmune diseases. This results in increased disease severity and even relapse. The evidence suggests that the organisms are specifically imported to the inflammatory sites and cause further tissue destruction, especially when the host is immunosuppressed. We review the evidence for the amplification of autoimmune inflammatory disease by microbial infection, which may be a general mechanism applicable to many human diseases. We suggest that patients with autoimmune disorders receiving immunosuppressing drugs should benefit from preventive antiviral therapy.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2005 PMID: 15743493 PMCID: PMC1065340 DOI: 10.1186/ar1691
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arthritis Res Ther ISSN: 1478-6354 Impact factor: 5.156
Disease associations
| Disease | EBV | CMV | HHV6 | HHV7 | HHV8 | PV B19 | References | ||
| SLE | +a | +b | + | + | + | [127-133] | |||
| RA | ++ | ++ | + | ++ | ++ | ++ | [64,95,130,134] | ||
| Sjoegren's disease | ++ | ++ | [135,136] | ||||||
| Myocarditis | + | + | + | ++ | [137-139] | ||||
| MS | + | + | ++ | ++ | [91,140-142] | ||||
| T1DMc | + | + | [143] | ||||||
| IgA nephritis | ++ | ++ | [144,145] | ||||||
| Guillain–Barré syndrome | + | + | [146,147] | ||||||
| Uveitis | ++ | + | [148,149] | ||||||
| Reiter's syndrome | + | + | ++ | [64,89] | |||||
| Polymyositis dermatomyositis | + | + | [130] | ||||||
| Aplastic anemia | ++ | [66] | |||||||
| ITP | + | + | + | [150,151] | |||||
| Vasculitis | + | + | + | ++ | [130] | ||||
| Behcet's disease | + | [130] | |||||||
| Giant cell arteritis | ++? | + | [152,153] | ||||||
| Scleroderma | + | + | [154,155] | ||||||
| Glomerulonephritis | ++ | ++ | [144,145,156-158] | ||||||
| Autoimmune infertility | + | [159,160] | |||||||
| Psoriais | + | [161] | |||||||
| Pityriasis rosea | ++ | ++ | [162] | ||||||
| Atherosclerosis | + | + | ++ | [98] | |||||
| Leprosy | + | + | [102,103,163] | ||||||
| After transplant | ++d | ++d | + | + | + | + | + | [123,124,164-173] |
aAssociations that include some form of documented presence (by culture, electron microscopy, immunohistochemistry, PCR or in situ hybridization) of the microbe in autoimmune target tissues are indicated by ++. Other associations are indicated by +. Note that the references are not comprehensive and omit most of the contradictory literature; the purpose was to look for evidence of microbial presence specifically in the autoimmune target tissues.
bCMV in SLE is often a complication from immunosuppressive therapy causing colitis, ileitis, retinitis, pneumonitis or vasculitis, but infection can also occur before therapy. It is unclear whether infection occurs on top of a pre-existing autoimmune lesion in an autoimmune tissue (for example skin or kidney). In settings of viral reactivation due to immunosuppression, the virus may be expressed ubiquitously and we were therefore more interested in reports in which expression was limited to an autoimmune target tissue.
cA recent review lists up to six viruses associated with type I diabetes mellitus (T1DM), but we focus here only on those mentioned repeatedly in association with a wide variety of autoimmune disorders.
dPTLD (post-transfusion lymphoproliferative disease) represents a spectrum of disorders in which lymphocytes (predominantly B cells) infiltrate the allotransplant organ. PTLD can evolve from a condition that is reversible upon cessation of immunosuppression, to an irreversible monoclonal lymphoma. Productive herpesvirus infections, especially EBV and CMV, occur in situ in allotransplants. By contrast, EBV is not usually present in rejected transplant tissues. Chlamydiae can cause infectious complications in severely immunodeficient transplant patients but do not directly infiltrate the transplanted tissues.
CMV, cytomegalovirus; EBV, Epstein–Barr virus; HHV, human herpesvirus; ITP, immune thrombocytopenia; MS, multiple sclerosis; PV, parvovirus; RA, rheumatoid arthritis; SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus.
Characteristics of human herpesviruses, Chlamydiae and parvovirus
| Organism | Receptors | Main cellular tropism | Proposed latency cell | Other tropism | References |
| EBV | CD21, MHC-II, α5β1 integrin | B | B | EPC, EC | [8] |
| CMV | EGFR | M/M | M/M; EC | N, EPC, EC | [174] |
| HHV6 | CD46+ | M/M, T, B | M/M | N, EPC | [175] |
| HHV7 | CD4+ heparan sulfate receptor | T | M/M | N, EPC, EC | [176,177] |
| HHV8 | Heparan sulfate receptor, EGFR | EC, M/M, B, T | B | N, EPC | [174,178] |
| Heparan sulfate receptor | M/M | EC, EPC | [179] | ||
| M/M | EC, EPC | ||||
| Parvovirus B19 | Erythrocyte P antigen | Erythroid precursors | EC | [66,67] |
B, B cells; CMV, cytomegalovirus; EBV, Epstein–Barr virus; EC, endothelial cells; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; EPC, epithelial cells; HHV, human herpesvirus; MHC, major histocompatibility complex; M/M, myelomonocytic cells; N, neural cells; T, T cells.