| Literature DB >> 24062747 |
Abstract
Studying the action of mechanisms of type I interferon (IFN) provides the insight to elucidate the cause and therapy for autoimmune diseases. There are high IFN responses in some diseases such as connective tissue diseases, but low responses in multiple sclerosis. Distinct IFN features lead us to understand pathology of a spectrum of autoimmune diseases and help us to search genetic changes, gene expression, and biomarkers for diagnosis, disease progression, and treatment response.Entities:
Keywords: Devic’s disease; SLE; Trex1; interferon-beta; multiple sclerosis; neuromyelitis optica; phospho-serine-STAT1; statins
Year: 2013 PMID: 24062747 PMCID: PMC3775461 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2013.00281
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Interferons in mice vs. humans.
| Mouse | Man | |
|---|---|---|
| 14 IFN-α genes | 13 IFN-α genes (12 proteins) | |
| 19 kDa, 165–166 aa | Four have alleles that differ between strains | |
| 10 Glycosylated | 2 Glycosylated | |
| IFN-α4 promoter binds IRF3 | IFN-α4 promoter binds IRF3 | |
| 20 kDa, 22 kDa glycosylated, 166 aa | 1 IFN-β | 1 IFN-β |
| IFN-β promoter binds IRF3 | IFN-β promoter binds IRF3 | |
| 22 kDa and glycosylated, 187 aa | 1 IFN-ε | 1 IFN-ε |
| 25 kDa, 180 aa | 1 IFN-κ | 1 IFN-κ |
| 20 kDa, 172 aa | 1 IFN-ω | None |
| 19 kDa, 182 aa | 1 IFN-ζ (limitin) | 1 IFN-ζ (limitin) |
| 1 IFN-γ | 1 IFN-γ | |
| 17 kDa | ||
| 21 kDa, 26–35 glycosylated | None | IFN-l1 (IL-29) |
| 22 kDa, 24 glycosylated | IFN-l2 (IL-28A) | IFN-l2 (IL-28A) |
| 21 kDa, 24 glycosylated | IFN-l3 (IL-28B) | IFN-l3 (IL-28B) |
| P-Y701-STAT1 | P-Y701-STAT1 | |
| P-S727-STAT1 | P-S727-STAT1 | |
| P-Y701-STAT1 | P-Y701-STAT1 | |
| P-Y689-STAT2 | P-Y690-STAT2 | |
| No Y833 – truncated ( | P-Y833-STAT2 | |
| No Y841 – truncated | P-Y841-STAT2 | |
| No STAT2 induction of P-STAT4 ( | P-STAT2 induces P-STAT4 | |
| Type I IFNs induce Th1 | P-STAT4 induces IFN-g, Th1 | |
| Type I IFNs induce Th1, but reports in MS are mixed | ||
| Antigen-induced | No known antigen (ADEM is Ag-induced) | |
| Improvement with pure IFN-β | Most improve with IFN-β therapy (∼85% have a low IFN signature) (∼15% have higher IFN signature; less response to IFN-β therapy) | |
*“Humans do not provide a good model for mouse immunology” from Ref. (76).
Characteristics of demyelinating disease.
| MS ( | SLE | CNS Sjögren’s ( | NMO ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MRI brain lesions | Periventricular, Dawson’s fingers | Gray and white matter lesions | Centrum seniovale | Hypothalamic and periventricular in <10% |
| “Random” WM + GM, but predilection for certain areas | ||||
| Small to large lesions | Small WM, rare large vasculitic, and CVA lesions | Small lesions | Medium to large lesions, later in course | |
| MRI cord lesions | <1 Segment | Rare extensive myelopathy | >3 Segments, also smaller lesions ( | >3 Segments; longitudinally extensive |
| Often subpial or acentric | Central cord | Central cord | ||
| Relapse rate | q 2 year | ∼Once per 5 year, on therapy | Similar to NMO | Frequent (∼2×/year) early in the course for NMO + patients |
| Progression | PPMS at onset in 10% | Stepwise and gradual multi-organ failure | Progressive sicca symptoms | None |
| RRMS becomes SPMS @ 8–15 year | ∼Once per 5 year, on therapy | |||
| Pathology CNS | Demyelination > axonal loss | “Vasculopathy” > cognitive changes | Demyelination < axonal damage | Demyelination < axonal damage |
| Many lesions will repair | Rare arteriopathy | Vasculopathy | Vasculopathy | |
| Destruction by CD8 T cells and monocytes | Cells include PMN and Eos | Severe | Severe and destructive | |
| No repair | ||||
| Serum marker | No marker | Anti-dsDNA | SSA/SSB 40% | Anti-AQP-4 60–75% |
| Anti-AQP-4 50% | ||||
| Target Ag | Unknown | Abnormally processed DNA and RNA | Nucleic acids, AQP-5 | AQP-4 |
| Minor salivary gland inflammation in 100% | ||||
| Serum type I IFN | Low IFN-α/β | High IFN-α/β | High IFN-α/β | High IFN-α/β |
| IFN-β Response by MNC | Low | High | High | High |
| CSF | High IgG | ∼Normal | ∼Normal | ∼Normal |
| OGCB | 90% | 10% | ∼10% | 20% |
| Triggers for exacerbation | Virus, vaccination for yellow fever | Virus | Virus, possibly | Virus; UTI (AQP-Z) ( |
| Type I IFNs | Possibly type I IFNs | Possibly type I IFNs | ||
| Low vitamin D | Sunlight | |||
| Smoking: MS onset and exacerbations | Smoking: SLE onset and exacerbations | Possibly smoking | Possibly smoking | |
| Therapy | IFN-β, glatiramer, natalizumab, fingolimod, fumarate, teriflunomide, alemtuzumab, rituximab, laquinimod | Hydroxychloro-quine, steroids, chemotherapy | Rituximab, steroids, chemotherapy | Rituximab, steroids, chemotherapy |
| Sunlight; vitamin D potentiates IFN-β-1b | ||||
| GI parasites | ||||
| Gout is rare | ||||
| Pregnancy | Benefit, perhaps from estriol | Worse | Unknown | Unknown |
| Linked diseases | ?Thyroid | Connective tissue diseases | Connective tissue diseases | Connective tissue diseases |
| ?Ulcerative colitis | Aicardi–Goutieres |
AQP, aquaporin; GI, gastrointestinal; GM, gray matter; NMO, neuromyelitis optica; UTI, urinary tract infection; WM, white matter.
Figure 1Basal IFN-regulated mRNA levels in therapy-naïve stable RRMS (black bars) are lower than in healthy controls (white). IFN-β therapy induces mRNA production in MS MNC (Pre-Rx vs. IFN Rx), but levels are still at or below levels in unstimulated normal MNC (white). MNC assayed before and 3 months after in vivo IFN-β-1b (8 MU sq qod). Early genes are IFN-regulatory factor-1 (IRF-1; enhances signaling) and IRF-2 (negative regulator), and later gene is 2′,5′-oligo-adenylate synthetase (2′,5′-OAS, an IFN-α/β-induced anti-viral enzyme). (Pre vs. Rx: IRF-1 and IRF-2, p < 0.02; 2′,5′-OAS, p < 0.03; paired t-test). (Avg ± SEM for IFN-stimulated gene/HPRT; RT-PCR) N = 5 RRMS patients for IRFs, and 10 for 2′,5′-OAS, vs. 9 normal (46).
Figure 2(A) P-S-STAT1 is markedly reduced in MNC from therapy-naïve, clinically active MS at baseline (left of dashed line), and after stimulation with 160 U/ml IFN-β (right of dashed line). (B) Area under curve of IFN-β-induced P-S-STAT1 is high in stable RRMS and healthy controls (NL) at 60′ vs. active MS (8 NL, 7 RRMS-s, 7 RR + SPMS-a) (p < 0.001 active/progressive MS vs. NL; ANOVA with repeated measures) (32).
Figure 3(A) Serum IFN-α/β activity is low in MS vs. NL, and high in SLE. IFN-α/β activity was obtained from real-time PCR of three expressed genes in WISH epithelial cells. N = 272 SLE on minimal Rx, 150 healthy controls, 57 stable RRMS naïve to Rx. Red bars = log median ± interquartile range (Kruskal–Wallis test). Medians = 3.1 for SLE, 0.4 for NL, and 0.1 for MS. Ninety percent of MS levels are <0.5 U/ml. In NMO, IFN-α/β is in the normal or SLE range. IFN-α/β detection is 0.1–0.5 U/ml, i.e., 20× more sensitive than many available assays (38). (B) P-S-STAT1 levels in MNC from SLE, stable NMO on minimal therapy, normal controls, stable RRMS, and active RRMS. Unpaired t-test with equal variance.
Figure 4(A) In vitro atorvastatin reduces IFN-β effects. MNC from 21 therapy-naïve RRMS were pretreated 24 h with 10 μM atorvastatin, then induced with 160 U/ml IFN-β-1b for 45 min (phosphorylated/activated P-STAT transcription factors) and for 24 h (induced unphosphorylated STAT1, STAT2, also MxA and IRF-1). Proteins quantified with Western blots, normalized with actin. Percentage change = statin-treated vs. no-statin (100%). *p < 0.05, **p < 0.001 vs. no-statin control. MEV = 100 μM mevalonate to reverse statin effect. Mean ± SEM; 21 replications (38). (B) In vivo statins reduce IFN-β therapy induction of serum type I IFN activity. Sera were obtained at 8 a.m. after statin washout or long-term statin alone, and then exactly 4 h after IFN-β injections or high-dose statins plus 4 h IFN-β. Fourteen stable RRMS. **p < 0.001 vs. IFN alone (paired t-test). Mean ± SEM (38).