| Literature DB >> 30505307 |
Abdulla Watad1,2,3, Charlie Bridgewood1, Tobias Russell1, Helena Marzo-Ortega1, Richard Cuthbert1, Dennis McGonagle1.
Abstract
In our paper, we discuss how the early phases of ankylosing spondylitis (AS) are linked to peri-firbocartilagenous osteitis in the sacroiliac joint and entheseal bone related anchoring sites. This skeletal proclivity is linked to an abnormal immunological response to skeletal biomechanical stress and associated microdamage. A key event in the early stages of AS appears to be the association with subclinical Crohn's-like colitis with this gut inflammation being pivotal to the osteitis reaction. Whether this osteitis is consequent to non-specific intestinal innate immune activation or adaptive immune responses against specific microbiotal or self-antigens is unknown. Recurrent iritis is an HLA-B27 associated feature that may predate AS and pursues a course independent of joint involvement, and points toward the pivotal role of organ specific immunology over generalized systemic immune responses in disease expression. Human genetics and animal model studies strongly incriminate the IL23/17 axis and TNF-α in disease pathogenesis. Preliminary work shows a strong convergence of innate immune cells including type 3 innate lymphoid-cells (ILC3) and γδ T-cells in skin, gut, entheseal, and eye inflammation. Despite the HLA-B27 association, the role of adaptive immunity, especially CD8+ T-cells mediated responses remains unproven and alternative theories have been proposed. The emerging non-dependence of axial inflammation on IL-23 but dependence on IL-17A is an unexpected new twist that awaits full explanation. In this mini-review, we discuss the key events in the early stages of human AS from clinical and basic science aspects, which could be crucial for attempted disease prevention studies in at risk subjects.Entities:
Keywords: HLA-B27; IL-17; IL-23; TNF-α; ankylosing spondylitis; enthesitis; microbiota; spondyloarthritis
Mesh:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30505307 PMCID: PMC6250731 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.02668
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Heterogeneous AS disease localization sharing microanatomical features. Features of this figure are reproduced from https://smart.servier.com (Servier Medical Art by Servier is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License), and were changed in terms of shape and size.
Figure 2Mechanical stress as a trigger of tissue microdamage and back pain and its consequences in those HLA-B27+ subjects with dysbyosis compared to healthy subjects. Patients with AS have what is termed “inflammatory back pain” at the earliest stages of disease. However, skeletal microdamage that is viewed as “non-inflammatory” has an initial inflammatory component to initiate removal of microdebris and tissue repair. Recognition that both early AS and non-AS back pain shares the commonalities of skeletal biomechanical stress, microdamage and microinflammation for tissue repair helps explain why it is very difficult in many subjects to accurately differentiate between inflammatory and “non-inflammatory” disease. Bone stressing reactions in AS and its juvenile genetically related equivalent occurs at sites of complex compression and shearing and tensile forces. Innate immune dysregulation at such sites contributed to by gut barrier dysfunction may result in entheseal immune activation. Subjects with HLA-B27 gene, dysbyosis and leaky gut are associated with adaptive immune activation and the characteristic early disease MRI phenotype of osteitis. Features of this figure are reproduced from https://smart.servier.com (Servier Medical Art by Servier is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License), and were changed in terms of shape and size.
Figure 3Different phases of the immunopathogenesis of AS. The interaction between different components considered as risk factors for AS leads to innate immunity dysregulation in the spinal entheses and other sub-fibrocartilagenous bone. Local secretion if IL-23 and activation of ILC3 and in later phase to adaptive immunity dysregulation with activation of IL-23R positive immune cells such as γδ T-cells and other unknown cells releasing IL-17 that results in remodeling effects including bone oedema, osteitis, new bone formation and in some cases spine fusion. Features of this figure are reproduced from https://smart.servier.com (Servier Medical Art by Servier is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License), and were changed in terms of shape and size.