| Literature DB >> 25120565 |
Abstract
The pathogenesis of chronic urticaria is not well delineated and the treatment is palliative as it is not tied to the pathomechanism. The centrality of mast cells and their inappropriate activation and degranulation as the key pathophysiological event are well established. The triggering stimuli and the complexity of effector mechanisms remain speculative. Autoimmune origin of chronic urticaria, albeit controversial, is well documented. Numerical and behavioral alterations in basophils accompanied by changes in signaling molecule expression and function as well as aberrant activation of extrinsic pathway of coagulation are other alternative hypotheses. It is also probable that mast cells are involved in the pathogenesis through mechanisms that extend beyond high affinity IgE receptor stimulation. An increasing recognition of chronic urticaria as an immune mediated inflammatory disorder related to altered cytokine-chemokine network consequent to immune dysregulation resulting from disturbed innate immunity is emerging as yet another pathogenic explanation. It is likely that these different pathomechanisms are interlinked rather than independent cascades, acting either synergistically or sequentially to produce clinical expression of chronic urticaria. Insights into the complexities of pathogenesis may provide an impetus to develop safer, efficacious, and targeted immunomodulators and biological treatment for severe, refractory chronic urticaria.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25120565 PMCID: PMC4120476 DOI: 10.1155/2014/674709
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dermatol Res Pract ISSN: 1687-6113
Infiltrating cells: pattern in urticarial wheal, uninvolved skin, and normal healthy control subjects [4].
| Cell type | Urticarial wheal | Uninvolved skin | Healthy control subjects |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mast cells | Normal count | Normal count | Normal count |
| Lymphocytes | Raised T-lymphocyte count | More numerous T-lymphocytes than in lesional skin | Low T-lymphocyte counts |
| Neutrophils | Major cellular infiltrate at 60 minutes of evolution of urticarial wheal | Significantly less infiltration than in lesional skin | Insignificant |
| Eosinophils | Significantly higher number | Insignificant | Insignificant |
| Basophil | Significant number, especially at 30 minutes of evolution, of urticarial wheal | Less but relevant number | Insignificant |
Cytokine, chemokine, and adhesion molecule expression: urticarial wheals, uninvolved skin, and healthy control subjects [4].
| Urticarial wheal | Uninvolved skin | Normal healthy controls | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cytokines | |||
| Interferon gamma | High expression | Significantly low expression | Not expressed |
| Interleukin-4 | High expression | Significantly low expression | Not expressed |
| Interleukin-5 | High expression | Significantly low expression | Not expressed |
| Interleukin-8 | Moderate expression | Moderate expression | Not expressed |
| Chemokines | |||
| C X C R 3/CC R 3 | Expression similar to control skin | High expression | Expression similar in lesional and healthy control skin |
| Adhesion molecules | |||
| Cellular adhesion molecule | High expression | Intense expression | Significant expression |
Basophil phenotypes: profile in chronic urticaria [31–33].
| Feature | Chronic urticarial (autoimmune/nonautoimmune) | |
|---|---|---|
| CIU-R | CIU-NR | |
| (1) Anti-IgE stimulation/cross-linking: HR in active disease | >10 percent of cellular content | <10 percent of cellular content |
| (2) Regulatory proteins | Paradigm shift | Paradigm shift |
| (a) Kinase | HR not determined by kinase level | HR not determined by kinase level |
| Normal Syk levels | Normal Syk levels | |
| (b) Phosphatase | Regulates HR, reduced SHIP-1 levels | Regulates HR, increased SHIP-2 levels |
| (3) Sensitivity to anti-IgE stimulation in remission | Heightened sensitivity | Sensitivity restored to levels as in normal healthy subjects |
HR: histamine release.
CIU-R: chronic idiopathic urticaria—responders.
CIU-NR: chronic idiopathic urticaria—nonresponders.
Syk: serum tyrosine kinase.
SHIP-1: Src homology 2 (SH2) containing inositol phosphatase 1.
SHIP-2: Src homology 2 (SH2) containing inositol phosphatase 2.
Mast cell mediators: relevant to chronic urticaria.
| Mediator | Effect in chronic urticaria |
|---|---|
| Preformed mediators | |
| Histamine | Direct potent vasoactive and smooth muscle spasmogenic effects |
| Newly synthesised mediators | |
| Lipid mediators | |
| LTC4 | Actions similar to histamine |
| Cytokines and chemokines | |
| Tumour necrosis factor-alpha | Newly synthesised as well as preformed |
| Upregulates expression of adhesion molecules on endothelial cells | |
| Interleukin-1 | Proinflammatory cytokine |
| Interleukin-4 | Chemotactic for neutrophils |
| Interleukin-5 | Recruits eosinophils [ |
| Interleukin-6 | Proinflammatory cytokine |
| Interleukin-8/CXCL2 | Member of C X C chemokines |
| MCP-1/CCL2 | Chemoattractant for eosinophils |
| MIP-1 alpha/CCL3 | Chemoattractant for eosinophils |
| Interleukin-16 | Chemoattractant for T-lymphocytes |
| RANTES/CCL5 | Chemoattractant for eosinophils [ |
LTC4: leukotriene C4, LTB4: leukotriene B4, PGD2: prostaglandin D2, MCP-1: monocyte chemotactic protein-1, MIP-1 alpha: monocyte inflammatory peptide-1, RANTES: regulated upon activation normal T-cell expressed and secreted.
Figure 1Pathogenesis of chronic urticaria: molecular intercommunication between autoimmune, complement, and coagulation cascade.