| Literature DB >> 21939410 |
Abstract
The goal of contemporary research in pemphigus vulgaris and pemphigus foliaceus is to achieve and maintain clinical remission without corticosteroids. Recent advances of knowledge on pemphigus autoimmunity scrutinize old dogmas, resolve controversies, and open novel perspectives for treatment. Elucidation of intimate mechanisms of keratinocyte detachment and death in pemphigus has challenged the monopathogenic explanation of disease immunopathology. Over 50 organ-specific and non-organ-specific antigens can be targeted by pemphigus autoimmunity, including desmosomal cadherins and other adhesion molecules, PERP cholinergic and other cell membrane (CM) receptors, and mitochondrial proteins. The initial insult is sustained by the autoantibodies to the cell membrane receptor antigens triggering the intracellular signaling by Src, epidermal growth factor receptor kinase, protein kinases A and C, phospholipase C, mTOR, p38 MAPK, JNK, other tyrosine kinases, and calmodulin that cause basal cell shrinkage and ripping desmosomes off the CM. Autoantibodies synergize with effectors of apoptotic and oncotic pathways, serine proteases, and inflammatory cytokines to overcome the natural resistance and activate the cell death program in keratinocytes. The process of keratinocyte shrinkage/detachment and death via apoptosis/oncosis has been termed apoptolysis to emphasize that it is triggered by the same signal effectors and mediated by the same cell death enzymes. The natural course of pemphigus has improved due to a substantial progress in developing of the steroid-sparing therapies combining the immunosuppressive and direct anti-acantholytic effects. Further elucidation of the molecular mechanisms mediating immune dysregulation and apoptolysis in pemphigus should improve our understanding of disease pathogenesis and facilitate development of steroid-free treatment of patients.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21939410 PMCID: PMC3251002 DOI: 10.3109/08916934.2011.606444
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autoimmunity ISSN: 0891-6934 Impact factor: 2.815
Figure 1Characterization of anti-keratinocyte antibody profiles of PV and PF sera by immunoprecipitation with proteins from cultures of human epidermal keratinocytes resolved by 7.5% SDS-PAGE. Modified from Ref. [18].
Figure 2The imaginary appearances of epidermis in the skin of PV patients that produce both Dsg 1 and 3 antibodies based on the postulates of Dsg compensation hypothesis vs. real appearance of lesional epidermis in PV patients.
Self-antigens recognized by pemphigus IgGs.
| Antigen | Reference |
|---|---|
| Adhesion molecules | |
| Collagen XVII (a.k.a. BPAG2) | [ |
| Desmocollin 1 | [ |
| Desmocollin 2 | [ |
| Desmocollin 3 | [ |
| Desmoglein 1 | [ |
| Desmoglein 2 | [ |
| Desmoglein 3 | [ |
| Desmoglein 4 | [ |
| Desmoplakin 1 | [ |
| Desmoplakin 2 | [ |
| E-cadherin | [ |
| Intercellular adhesion molecule 1 | [ |
| Plakoglobin (a.k.a. γ-catenin) | [ |
| Plakophilin-3 | [ |
| Platelet/endothelial cell adhesion molecule | [ |
| Cell membrane receptors | |
| Acetylcholine receptor | [ |
| Acetylcholine receptor, Mj muscarinic | [ |
| Acetylcholine receptor, M2 muscarinic | [ |
| Acetylcholine receptor, M4 muscarinic | [ |
| Acetylcholine receptor, M5 muscarinic | [ |
| Acetylcholine receptor, α3 nicotinic | [ |
| Acetylcholine receptor, α9 nicotinic | [ |
| Acetylcholine receptor, α10 nicotinic | (Unpublished) |
| Acetylcholine receptor, ε nicotinic | (Unpublished) |
| Annexins | [ |
| FceRIa | [ |
| Neuronal voltage-gated K+ channel | [ |
| Pemphaxin [a.k.a. annexin 9) | [ |
| Taurine transporter-like molecule | [ |
| Thrombospondin receptor | [ |
| TNF receptor superfamily member 5 | [ |
| Transmembrane 4 superfamily (a.k.a. tetraspanin family; CD37) | [ |
| PERP | [ |
| Parathyroid hormone 1 receptor | [ |
| TGF-(3 receptor-associated protein | [ |
| Insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor | [ |
| Immunologic/hematologic antigens | |
| Hemoglobin ε 1 | [ |
| Immunoglobulin heavy-chain constant region 72 (Fc-IgG2) | [ |
| Interferon regulatory factor 8 | [ |
| Interleukin 1 receptor accessory protein-like 2 | [ |
| Sialic acid binding Ig-like lectin 3 (CD33) | [ |
| Signaling lymphocytic activation molecule 5 (CD84) | [ |
| T-cell surface antigen (CD2) | [ |
| Neuronal/oncologic antigens | |
| Carcinoembryonic antigen-related cell adhesion molecule 6 | [ |
| NADH dehydrogenase-like protein | [ |
| Neuronal cytoplasmic collapsin response mediator protein 5 | [ |
| Nicotinamide/nicotinic acid mononucleotide adenylyltransferase 2 | [ |
| Unclassified neuronal antigen | [ |
| Peripheral myelin protein 22 | [ |
| Thyrogastric cluster antigens | |
| Gastric parietal cell antigen | [ |
| Glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD65) | [ |
| Proline dehydrogenase 1 | [ |
| Microsomal antigen | [ |
| Thyroperoxidase | [ |
Figure 3Profiles of PV IgGs absorbed by recombinant Dsg 1 and Dsg 3 baculoproteins in the Western blots of keratinocyte proteins resolved by 7.5% SDS-PAGE. Lane 1, reaction of PV IgG purified on the rDsg3-His construct with human keratinocytes. Lane 2, no primary antibody control for lane 1. Lane 3, no primary antibody control for lanes 4 and 5. Lane 4, reaction of PV IgG purified on the rDsgl-Ig-His construct with Dsg3 keratinocytes. Lane 5, reaction of PV IgG purified on the rDsg3-Ig-His construct with Dsg3 keratinocytes. The positions of relative molecular mass (Mr) markers run in parallel lanes of each blot are shown to the left of the respective blot. The apparent relative Mr of keratinocyte protein bands visualized due to PV antibody binding is shown to the right of lanes 2 and 5 in the columns designated Mr. Modified from Ref. [18].
Figure 4Hypothetical scheme of the time course of pathobiologic events leading to acantholysis in pemphigus. In stage I, antibodies to PERP and/or cellular AChRblock the physiologic control of polygonal cell shape and intercellular adhesion. This increases phosphorylation of adhesion molecules with their subsequent dissociation from the adhesion units on CM, and also initiates programed cell death. In stage II, the tonofilament (TF). cytoskeleton collapses and keratinocytes shrink with associated sloughing of desmosomes which elicits autoimmune response to the desmosomal antigens. In stage III, anti-Dsg antibodies bind to their targets on the CM of keratinocytes thus precluding formation of new intercellular junctions. Modified from Ref. [55].
Figure 5Hypothetical scheme of immune dysregulation in PV. Abbreviations: APC, antigen-presenting cells; IL, interleukin. Modified from Ref. [339].
Figure 6Hypothetical scheme of early signaling steps during first 6h after PV IgG binding to keratinocytes and their correlation with the major intracellular pathobiologic events. Abbreviations: EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; Dsg, desmoglein; NDAgs, non-Dsg antigens. From Ref. [47].
Figure 7Hypothetical scheme of signaling events mediating keratinocyte damage in PV. Abbreviations: AMPVAb, anti-mitochondrial PV antibody; Cs, caspase; FasL, Fas ligand; FasR, Fas receptor; MRPVAg, mitochondria-related PV antigen; NO, nitric oxide; OPVAb, PV antibodies of other specificities, including anti-AChR and anti-PERP antibodies; OPVAg, other types of putative PV antigens; PVAb, PV antibody; TNFa, tumor necrosis factor a. Modified from Ref. [37].
Figure 8Hypothetical scheme of keratinocyte apoptolysis in PV. Step 1: apoptolysis is triggered by binding of autoantibodies to the PV antigens capable of transducing apopotolytic signals from the keratinocyte plasma membrane, such as PERP and AChRs. Step 2: outside-in signaling from ligated antigens launches the cell death cascades. Step 3: collapse and retraction of the TFs cleaved by executioner caspases and dissociation of interdesmosomal adhesion complexes caused by phosphorylation of adhesion molecules result in basal cell shrinkage, most of desmosomes remain intact. Step 4: massive cleavage of cellularproteins by activated cell death enzymes leads to collapse of the cytoskeleton and tearing off desmosomes from the CM with subsequent production of scavenging (i.e. secondary) autoantibodies mainly to sloughed adhesion molecules. Step 5: suprabasal acantholytic cells die rendering a tombstone appearance to surviving basal cells. Modified from Ref. [1].
Hypotheses and realities in the knowledge of pemphigus.
| Hypotheses | Realities |
|---|---|
| The epidermal integrity is mediated exclusively by the Dsg 1 and 3 adhesion molecules | Neither Dsg 1 nor Dsg 3 can solely sustain keratinocyte adhesion in epidermis. Patients with striate palmoplantar keratoderma featuring N-terminal deletion in Dsg 1 do not develop skin blisters [ |
| Acantholysis is PV is caused by steric hindrance of Dsg 3 by autoantibodies | Electron microscopic studies of limited acantholysis produced by anti-Dsg 3 antibody in murine epidermis revealed that steric hindrance of Dsg 3 leads to a desmosomal split without keratin retraction [ |
| Clinical and histological features of PF and PV can be reproduced solely by Dsg 1 and 3 antibodies, respectively | The experiments using the Dsgl-Ig and Dsg3-Ig chimeras that absorbed out all disease causing pemphigus antibodies, thus giving a rise to a notion that anti-Dsg 1/3 antibodies are the sole cause of pemphigus, were flawed by the presence of non-Dsg antibodies ( |
| An interplay between Dsg 1 and 3 antibodies determines the mucocutaneous phenotype in patients with autoimmune pemphigus | PF patients can develop antibodies against both Dsg 1 and Dsg 3 [ |
| The titers of anti-Dsg 1 or 3 antibodies correlate closely with the severely of the disease | The Dsg 1/3 antibody titers do not correlate with disease activity [ |
| The sera of patients with autoimmune pemphigus contain autoantibodies only to the Dsg 1/3 targets | More than 50 organ-specific and non-organ-specific proteins have been reported to date as specific targets for autoantibodies produced by PV and/or PF patients ( |
| Systemic corticosteroids treat pemphigus patients exclusively by inhibiting autoantibody production | The therapeutic effect of “pulse” therapy with methylprednisolone commences within a few days, whereas autoantibody titers decline within 3-4 weeks [ |
| Paraneoplastic pemphigus (PNP) is a variant of classical pemphigus | PNP is not related to PV and PF, but represents a clinical variant of the paraneoplastic autoimmune multiorgan syndrome (PAMS) in which patients, in addition to small airway occlusion, may display a spectrum of at least five clinical variants, i.e. pemphigus like (a.k.a. PNP), pemphigoid like, erythema multiforme like, graft vs. host disease like, and lichen planus like [ |