| Literature DB >> 31182092 |
Pleiades T Inaoka1, Masato Shono2, Mishio Kamada2, J Luis Espinoza3.
Abstract
Sarcoidosis is a rare inflammatory disease characterized by the development of granulomas in various organs, especially in the lungs and lymph nodes. Clinics of the disease largely depends on the organ involved and may range from mild symptoms to life threatening manifestations. Over the last two decades, significant advances in the diagnosis, clinical assessment and treatment of sarcoidosis have been achieved, however, the precise etiology of this disease remains unknown. Current evidence suggests that, in genetically predisposed individuals, an excessive immune response to unknown antigen/s is crucial for the development of sarcoidosis. Epidemiological and microbiological studies suggest that, at least in a fraction of patients, microbes or their products may trigger the immune response leading to sarcoid granuloma formation. In this article, we discuss the scientific evidence on the interaction of microbes with immune cells that may be implicated in the immunopathogenesis of sarcoidosis, and highlight recent studies exploring potential implications of human microbiota in the pathogenesis and the clinical course of sarcoidosis.Entities:
Keywords: Autoimmune disease; Dysbiosis; Granulomas; Host-microbe interactions; Microbiota; Sarcoidosis
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31182092 PMCID: PMC6558716 DOI: 10.1186/s12929-019-0537-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Sci ISSN: 1021-7770 Impact factor: 8.410
Demographic characteristics and main clinical features of Sarcoidosis
| Demographic data | Main characteristics | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | No predominance | |
| Age at onset (years) | Any age Peaks at 25~40 years. Nearly 30% of cases in older than 60 | [ |
| Ethnicity | More common in northern Europeans (60 per 100,000). Less common in Asians (1.3–2.17 per 100,000) In the USA (35.5 per 100,000 in Afro-Americans 10.9 per 100,000 in Caucasians) | ([ |
| Clinical findings | ||
| Constitutional manifestations | Asymptomatic (30~60% of cases) Malaise, Fever, Anorexia, weight loss | ([ |
| Pulmonary Sarcoidosis | At least 90% of affected individuals have lung involvement -Most patients are asymptomatic. -Primarily manifests as hilar or mediastinal adenopathy -Some patients present with interstitial lung disease -Fibrosis of the lung (20% of patients) -Pulmonary hypertension (in 5% of cases) | ([ |
| Skin sarcoidosis | Skin lesions (found in 20~35% of patients) and can cause: Rash, papules or Erythema nodosum | ([ |
| Löfgren syndrome | Occurs more often in Scandinavian. Fever, Enlarged lymph nodes, Arthritis and erythema nodosum | [ |
| Ocular sarcoidosis | Can affect any part of the eye and may cause: Uveitis, Scleritis, Conjunctival-granuloma, Eyelid abnormalities, Optic neuropathy, lacrimal gland enlargement and orbital inflammation | ([ |
| Musculoskeletal | Infrequent May cause: Nonspecific arthralgia, Polyarthritis (acute or chronic) Sarcoid myopathy (muscle weakness, muscle pain, or muscle nodules) | [ |
| Cardiac sarcoidosis | Infrequent. Most commonly manifests with arrhythmias (tachycardia or heart block). Less commonly: Pericardial effusion or myocardial granulomas leading to cardiac fibrosis | ([ |
| Neurosarcoidosis | Not well characterized due to its rarity. Patients may present with: Intracranial or spinal mass lesions Optic neuritis Facial mononeuropathies Myopathy and peripheral neuropathy | [ |
Fig. 1Legend of the figure. A schematic model for granuloma formation. a Dendritic cells pick up the initiating antigen (likely an environmental airborne antigen or a microbe) and migrate toward lymph nodes, where they interact with appropriate T cells, promoting the differentiation and clonal expansion of T helper (Th)1 and 17 cells. Activated Th1 and Th17 cells promote an inflammatory response via the release of cytokines such as interferon γ (INF-γ), interleukin 2 (IL-2) and IL-17 contributing to granuloma formation. b Microbes, such as mycobacteria or C. acnes, may directly infect monocytes or macrophages, which fail to properly eliminate the infection and in turn differentiate into giant cells or epithelioid cells. Simultaneously, giant cells or epithelioid cells produce tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), which promotes the formation and maintenance of sarcoid granulomas. In addition, by secreting MCP-1 and CXCL10 chemokines, macrophages attract Th1/17 cells, monocytes, regulatory T cells (Tregs). These Tregs fail to control the inflammatory response and secrete transforming grow factor β (TGF- β) that may contribute to fibrosis and granuloma organization (c) An altered composition of the microbiota (dysbiosis) of the gut or lungs may act as a source of microbes that secrete pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs), which may activate immune cells of the innate system, such as monocytes or eosinophils, by interacting with pathogen recognition receptors (PRRs) like toll-like receptors (TLRs) and in the presence of sustained activation, it may further promote the generation of giant cells and epithelioid cells from macrophages and thereby contribute to granuloma formation via the secretion of cytokines such as IL-6, IL-12, IL-18, and TNF-α
a List of putative microbes associated with sarcoidosis and detected by microbiological or proteomic methods
| Microorganism | Detection method | Main findings | Type of sample | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IHC with a | C. | FFPE of myocardial tissues obtained by surgery or autopsy and endomyocardial biopsy from patients with cardiac sarcoidosis ( | [ | |
| IHC using monoclonal antibody against | Granuloma in the epiretinal membrane was observed in 4 of 10 patients with sarcoidosis, and all the granulomas were positive for PAB | Ten patients with uveitis associated with sarcoidosis | [ | |
| IHC with a | Eleven patients (12 eyes) with sarcoid uveitis were enrolled in this study. | [ | ||
| MALDI-IMS for propionibacterial proteins | Sarcoidosis 7/15 Controls 1/4 | Nineteen snap frozen sarcoidosis specimens were analyzed using a MALD-IMS | [ | |
| IHC and western blotting with PAB antibody and ribosome-bound trigger-factor protein (TIG antibody) | Small round bodies within sarcoid granulomas in 20/27 (74%) video-assisted thoracic surgery lung samples, 24/50 (48%) transbronchial lung biopsy samples, 71/81 (88%) Japanese lymph node samples, and 34/38 (89%) German lymph node samples. | FFPE samples of lungs and lymph nodes from 196 patients with sarcoidosis, and corresponding control samples from 275 patients with non-sarcoidosis diseases. | [ | |
| Isolation of | Sarcoidosis 31/40 Controls 38/180 | Abe, 1984 [ | ||
| mTB and Mycobacterium sp | IHC with panels of various antibodies, including antimycobacterial MAbs specific for M tuberculosis complex, for M. leprae and for cross-reactive mycobacterial antigens | Pleomorphic chromogens (PCs) structures are sites of mycobacterial degradation | 28 cases of sarcoidosis and 14 cases of malignancy associated sinus histiocytosis (series B) | |
| Microscopic identification of mTB bacilli | Tubercle bacilli found in the sarcoid phase in 18; in preceding caseating tuberculosis in 11;. | Granuloma specimens from 240 patients with tuberculosis. | [ | |
| IHC using mTB PPD antibody was used to detect mycobacterial antigens | IHC analysis for MTB anti-PPD antibody positive for all TB patients and in 3 sarcoidosis patients (30%) | FFPE tissue specimens from granulomatous tissues of 10 patients with sarcoidosis and 12 confirmed pulmonary tuberculosis | ||
| Borrelia sp and Borrelia Burgdorferi | IHC with anti-borrelia polyclonal antibody and assessment with FFM | Using FFPE, Borrelia were detected in 127 cases of GA (80.9%). | 157 biopsies of GA | Ziemer M, 2008 [ |
| IHC with anti-borrelia polyclonal antibody and assessment FFM | 26% (13/35) were positive to Borrelia sp. 1/61 Borrelia sp. | Cutaneous sarcoidosis (skin biopsies) | Derler, 2009 [ | |
Dot-blot analysis (Dotblot Borrelia Kit) and ELISA assay | 15/46 Borrelia sp. 2/100 Borrelia sp. | Serum samples from 46 patients with sarcoidosis an 150 controls | Ishihara, 1998 [ | |
| ELISA and Western blot for Borrelia burgdorferi | B. burgdorferi + in sarcoidosis 1/60 controls 27/1000 Borrelia burdorferi. | Serum samples os patients with sarcoidosis | Martens, 1997 [ | |
Elisa and Dot-blot analysis for Borrelia sp. | Sarcoidosis patients 2/38 (5.3%) Borrelia sp. Control 1/80 (1.2%) Borrelia sp. | Serum samples Mainly lung sarcoidosis | Ishihara, 1996 [ |
aSelected references are articles in which microbes or their proteins were directly documented within sarcoidal granulomas. Studies where the presence of microbes was investigated at genomic level (DNA or RNA) are compiled in other reviews articles published elsewhere
Immunohistochemistry (IHC)
Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization imaging mass spectrometry (MALDI-IMS)
Focus-floating microscopy (FFM)
Purified protein derivative (PPD)
Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE)
Granuloma Annulare (GA)