| Literature DB >> 28246613 |
Abstract
Idiopathic chronic inflammatory conditions (ICIC) such as allergy, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and various autoimmune conditions are a worldwide health problem. Understanding the pathogenesis of ICIC is essential for their successful therapy and prevention. However, efforts are hindered by the lack of comprehensive understanding of the human immune system function. In line with those efforts, described here is a concept of stochastic continuous dual resetting (CDR) of the immune repertoire as a basic principle that governs the function of immunity. The CDR functions as a consequence of system's thermodynamically determined intrinsic tendency to acquire new states of inner equilibrium and equilibrium against the environment. Consequently, immune repertoire undergoes continuous dual (two-way) resetting: against the physiologic continuous changes of self and against the continuously changing environment. The CDR-based dynamic concept of immunity describes mechanisms of self-regulation, tolerance, and immunosenescence, and emphasizes the significance of immune system's compartmentalization in the pathogenesis of ICIC. The CDR concept's relative simplicity and concomitantly documented congruency with empirical, clinical, and experimental data suggest it may represent a plausible theoretical framework to better understand the human immune system function.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28246613 PMCID: PMC5299180 DOI: 10.1155/2017/3760238
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Figure 1Concomitance of the age-related changes in glycosylation and glycation patterns with the age-related repertoire competency expansion and contraction/attrition. Competency for peptide antigens develops early in life and persists throughout life. In contrast, repertoire for carbohydrate antigens develops gradually. It parallels the growth- and maturation-induced glycosylation of self (first ~15 years of life), to which the prominently active thymus during that period of life responds with an output of carbohydrate-responsive repertoire. That repertoire contracts later in life, paralleling increased alterations of self due to potentially pathogenic glycosylation and/or glycation processes. Those alterations may be primarily induced by environmental factors (injury, infection, nutrition-induced metabolic abnormalities, etc.) and may result in repertoire attrition.
Figure 2Compartmentalization: competent mucosal immune compartment is essential for appropriate function of the immune system. The CDR concept indicates favorable outcomes in a system with strong mucosal barrier function and appropriately sequestered systemic immune compartment (panel (a)). Panel (b) shows unfavorable outcomes in a system with deficient mucosal barrier function and poorly sequestered systemic immune compartment.
Figure 3Pathogenesis of idiopathic chronic inflammatory conditions (ICIC). Shown are some of the factors that can affect the systemic immune compartment and contribute to the development of ICIC (only few are listed). Note the reduced regulatory function of the systemic compartment as a common mechanism in pathogenesis of ICIC. Also, note the influence of age and gender. ASTH = asthma; COPD = chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; ILD = interstitial lung disease; RA = rheumatoid arthritis; IBD = inflammatory bowel disease; SLE = systemic lupus erythematosus; MS = multiple sclerosis.