| Literature DB >> 21991516 |
Naoko Yanagisawa1, Ikuko Haruta, Ken Kikuchi, Noriyuki Shibata, Junji Yagi.
Abstract
The etiopathogenesis of many autoimmune disorders has not been identified. The aim of this paper is to focus on the involvement of bacterial exposure in the pathogenesis of primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) and autoimmune pancreatitis (AIP), both of which are broadly categorized as autoimmune disorders involving hepatobiliary-pancreatic lesions. Avirulent and/or commensal bacteria, which may have important role(s) as initiating factors in the pathogenesis of autoimmune disorders such as PBC and AIP, will be emphasized.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21991516 PMCID: PMC3168461 DOI: 10.5402/2011/513514
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Gastroenterol ISSN: 2090-4398
Experimental animal models of autoimmune pancreatitis.
| Animal | Organs with lesions | Induction | Target antigen | Effector cells | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MRL/lpr mice | Pancreas | Spontaneous | ? | T cells | [ |
| Pancreas, salivary gland | [ | ||||
|
| Pancreas, salivary gland, lung | Spontaneous | ? | CD4+ T cells | [ |
| Pancreas | [ | ||||
| WBN/Kob rats, male | Pancreas, salivary gland, bile duct | Spontaneous | ? | CD8+ T cells | [ |
| MHC-II−/− mice | Pancreas | Spontaneous | ? | CD8+ T cells | [ |
| T-cell+ HLADR*0405Ab0 NOD mice | Pancreas, lung | Spontaneous | ? | T cells | [ |
| Tgfbr2 | Pancreas, salivary gland | Spontaneous | ? | T cells | [ |
| NOD.CD28KO mice | Pancreas | Spontaneous | Amylase | CD4+ T cells | [ |
| DA(RP) rats | ? | Amylase-specific T cell | ? | CD4+ and CD8+ T cells | [ |
| PL/J mice (H-2s, H-2u) | Pancreas, salivary gland, kidney | CA-II | CA-II | ? | [ |
| nTx-BALBc mice | Pancreas, salivary gland, bile duct, kidney | CA-II | CA-II | CD4+ Th1 cells | [ |
| nTx-BALBc mice | Pancreas, salivary gland, bile duct, kidney | LF | LF | CD4+ Th1 cells | [ |
| MRL/Mp, MRL/lpr mice | Pancreas, salivary gland, bile duct, kidney | ? | CD4+ T cells | [ | |
| MRL/Mp mice | Pancreas, salivary gland, liver | Poly I:C | PSTI | ? | [ |
| Pancreas | ? | ? | [ | ||
| IL-10KO mice | Pancreas | Poly I:C, LPS | ? | ? | [ |
| C57BL/6 mice | Pancreas, salivary gland, liver, kidney, lung | LP-BM5 | ? | CD4+ T cells | [ |
| C57BL/6 mice | Pancreas, salivary gland |
| ? | T cells | [ |
CA-II: carbonic anhydrase II; LF: lactoferrin; PSTI: pancreatic secretary trypsin inhibitor; poly I : C: polyinosinic polycytidylic acid; nTx: neonatal thymectomy.
Modified from [28, 29].
Figure 1Hypothetical pathogenesis of PBC and AIP. During the initiation phase, weak but silently infiltrating PAMPs and/or antigen(s), such as avirulent bacteria, trigger and upregulate the innate immune system. Second, the progressive phase features the persistence of this PAMP attack or stimulation by molecular mimicry and/or exposure or stimulation from commensal flora possessing the same antigenic epitope that the initial pathogen and/or PAMP possessed, thereby upregulating the host immune response to the target antigen. These slowly progressive steps eventually lead to the development of autoimmune diseases. Modified from previous papers [25, 61].