| Literature DB >> 29651292 |
Abstract
We have previously shown that predominant expression of key inflammatory cytokines and chemokines at autoimmune sites or tumor sites induces loss of B cells tolerance, resulting in autoantibody production against the dominant cytokine/chemokine that is largely expressed at these sites. These autoantibodies are high-affinity neutralizing antibodies. Based on animal models studies, we suggested that they participate in the regulation of cancer and autoimmunity, albeit at the level of their production cannot entirely prevent the development and progression of these diseases. We have, therefore, named this selective breakdown of tolerance as "Beneficial Autoimmunity." Despite its beneficial outcome, this process is likely to be stochastic and not directed by a deterministic mechanism, and is likely to be associated with the dominant expression of these inflammatory mediators at sites that are partially immune privileged. A recent study conducted on autoimmune regulator-deficient patients reported that in human this type of breakdown of B cell tolerance is T cell dependent. This explains, in part, why the response is highly restricted, and includes high-affinity antibodies. The current mini-review explores this subject from different complementary perspectives. It also discusses three optional translational aspects: amplification of autoantibody production as a therapeutic approach, development of autoantibody based diagnostic tools, and the use of B cells from donors that produce these autoantibodies for the development of high-affinity human monoclonal antibodies.Entities:
Keywords: autoantibodies; cancer; chemokines; cytokines; experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis; tolerance; type I diabetes
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29651292 PMCID: PMC5884937 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.00623
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Selective breakdown of B cell tolerance to key inflammatory cytokines/chemokines regulates cancer, autoimmunity and infectious diseases: selective breakdown of tolerance to chemokines and cytokines may result from the generation of an inflammatory process at sites that are partially restricted from immune surveillance (autoimmune sites, tumor sites) or as a results of a deficiency in central tolerance (APS1/APECES patients with autoimmune regulator deficiency). In both, it is believed that breakdown of B cell tolerance follows the breakdown of T cell tolerance. The data obtained from APS1/APECES patients strongly support this hypothesis.
The role of autoantibodies to cytokines and chemokines in the pathogenesis of autoimmune, cancer, and infectious diseases.
| Autoantibodies | Disease | Suggested role in the regulation of disease | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anti-CCL2 | Prostate cancer | Restrain by inhibiting CCR2+ tumor-associated macrophages accumulation at the tumor site | ( |
| Anti-TNFα | Rheumatoid arthritis, Psoriasis | Restrain by blocking TNFα | ( |
| Anti-CCL3 | Type-1 diabetes | Restrain by blocking CCL3 | ( |
| Anti-IFN-γ | Type-1 diabetes | Restrain by blocking IFN-γ | ( |
| Anti-IFN-α | Psoriasis | Restrain by blocking IFN-α | ( |
| Anti-IL-17 | Chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis (CMC) | Aggravate by blocking IL-17 | ( |
| Anti-IL-22 | CMC | Aggravate by blocking IL-22 | ( |
The table summarizes data that are presented and discussed along the manuscript.