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a Viral Immunobiology Laboratory, Division of Virology, The Scripps Research Institute,Department of Neuropharmacology, La Jolla, California 92037, USA
| ABSTRACT |
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Key Words: autoimmune disease microbial agent insulin-independent diabetes mellitus sequence sharing
| INTRODUCTION |
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Microbial agents or viruses can induce autoimmune responses and diseases by a variety of mechanisms, several of which may occur during an infection. For example, proteins of certain infectious agents have a proliferative effect on unique lymphocyte subsets and hence act as polyclonal activators. Viruses can preferentially infect/destroy a particular T cell subset, leading to an imbalance in the immune response. In other instances, infectious agents can up-regulate Th.1 cytokines, thereby increasing selected expression of molecules such as MHC glycoproteins, as well as activation and costimulatory molecules such as B7.1/CD28. Several microbial agents have been found to encode superantigens that can selectively activate subset(s) of T cells (2426). In other cases, viruses may break self tolerance by de novo release of self epitopes presumably by direct injury caused by the virus or secondarily by the virus-specific T cells generated. Either way, damage can occur by a procedure called epitope spreading (27, 28). Microbes can also direct the release of cytokines and chemokines, important regulators of immune responses. These molecules can act as growth, differentiation, or chemotactic factors for different Th populations and regulate expression of MHC class I and class II molecules. Thus, an infectious agent could release a cytokine-like interferon that induces the expression of MHC determinants. In addition, microbesespecially virusescan infect and selectively replicate in unique lymphocyte subsets and, by their presence, activation, or replication, cause immunosuppression or immunoenhancement. Last, microbes can contain chemical structures that mimic normal host `self' proteins, an event termed molecular mimicry (
Fig. 1).
Several possibilities are listed in
Table 1.
Of these, molecular mimicry is the focus of this review. Whereas there is heightened suspicion that infectious agents and molecular mimicry play a role in several autoimmune diseases, direct evidence has been hard to come by. There are a number of reasons for this discrepancy: for instance, the organism initiating the autoimmune process may be cleared by the host immune response, thus removing our ability to isolate it. However, the initiated immune response would continue the process against cross-reactive `self' determinant, a `hit-and-run' scenario.
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| DEVELOPMENT OF MOLECULAR MIMICRY CONCEPT |
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Biologic evidence was obtained over the next few years in several animal models indicating that molecular mimicry was more than an epiphenomenon (reviewed in ref 9). An early observation used myelin basic protein and allergic encephalomyelitis. The myelin basic protein sequences that cause allergic encephalitis are known and the encephalitogenic site of 810 amino acids has been mapped for several different animal species. With the use of computer-assisted analysis (32), several viral proteins were uncovered that showed significant homology with the encephalitogenic site of myelin basic protein, including fits between the myelin basic protein and nucleoprotein of the hemagglutinin of influenza virus, core protein of adenovirus, EC-LF2 protein of Epstein-Barr virus, and hepatitis B virus polymerase as well as others. However, the best fit occurred between the myelin basic protein encephalitogenic site in the rabbit and hepatitis B virus polymerase (HBVP). It was then shown that inoculation of HBVP peptide peripherally into rabbits caused perivascular infiltration localized to the central nervous system, reminiscent of disease induced by inoculation of whole myelin basic protein or the peptide component of the encephalitogenic site of myelin basic protein (34;
Fig. 4).
Further, a specific immune response to both cellular and humoral to myelin basic protein occurred. Thereafter, several other animal models were developed showing cross-reactivity between a microbe and self antigen leading to disease. For example, coxsackie B3 virus shared sequence homology with heart myosin or other myocardial proteins (i.e., GAP junction), and experimental manipulations in experimental animals led to myocardial necrosis and myocarditis (3537). Another early example of sequence homologies, immune cross-reactivity, and disease in animals was autoimmune uveitis with cross-reactivity between S-antigen and viral peptides (38).
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| CORRELATION OF MOLECULAR MIMICRY WITH HUMAN DISEASE |
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The large majority of patients with the autoimmune disease myasthenia gravis (MG) have antibodies against the acetylcholine receptor (AChR). Purification of antibodies from MG patients using the human AChR
-subunit amino acids 157 to 170 provided IgG antibodies that bound to native AChR and inhibited the binding of
-bungarotoxin to the receptor (39). The human AChR
-subunit amino acids 160167 showed specific immunologic cross-reactivity with a shared homologous domain on herpes simplex virus glycoprotein D, residues 286293, by both specific binding and inhibition assays. Antibodies to the human AChR
-subunit bound to herpes simplex virus-infected cells. The data of immunologic cross-reactivity of the AChR `self epitope' with herpes simplex virus and the presence of cross-reactive antibodies in the sera of MG patients suggest that this virus may be associated with the initiation of some cases of myasthenia (39).
IDDM results from autoimmune destruction of insulin-making beta cells in the islets of Langerhans believed to be caused by autoreactive T lymphocytes. Clinical studies have shown a high correlation with immune response to glutamate decarboxylase (GAD) and patients progressing to or having IDDM. Epidemiologic evidence has correlated IDDM with several viral infections, including coxsackie B virus, which has been shown, albeit rarely, by Koch's postulates to be associated with cases of acute IDDM (13, 14, 16). A component of GAD amino acids 247279 was shown to be recognized by patients with increased risk of IDDM and to share sequence similarity with the P2-C protein of coxsackie B virus. Evaluation of patients with IDDM, of high risk to develop IDDM, or healthy controls showed that peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 4 of 16 newly diagnosed IDDM patients (25%) or 7 of 15 patients (47%) with high risk of developing IDDM (having islet cell autoantibodies with IDDM) proliferated to both GAD and coxsackie B viral peptides; however, none of the 13 healthy controls did (40, 41), suggesting a possible association for a virus like coxsackie B with IDDM. Recently, Honeyman et al. (41) reported that a dominant peptide (aa 805 to 820) from IA-2 islet protein, which is a molecular target of pancreatic islet autoimmunity in type 1 diabetes in humans, had 56% identity and 100% similarity for 9 aa with a sequence in VP7, a major immunogenic protein of human rotavirus. The contiguous sequence of VP7, had 75% identity and 92% similarity over 12 aa with a known T cell epitope in GAD. Further, the IA-2 immunodominant peptide showed significant identity with hepatitis C virus and hemophilus influenza. Three other distinct IA-2 peptides shown 71 to 100% similarity over 7 to 12 aa to herpes, rhino-, hanta-, and flaviviruses.
One of the interesting and still controversial findings for an association of microbes with disease by the mechanism of molecular mimicry occurs with AS and bacterial infections (4246). Epidemiologic, bacteriologic, and immunologic evidence is firm for a correlation between AS, the hypervariable region of HLA B27, and several bacterial infections including those of S. flexneri, Yersinia entercolytica, and K. pneumoniae. Over 90% of individuals developing AS have the HLA B27 haplotype. In a S. flexneri epidemic of about 150,000 cases in Finland in the 1940s, 344 infected individuals developed Reiter's syndrome; of these, 82 went on to develop AS. Amino acid sequence homology between enteric bacteria associated with Reiter's syndrome and thus AS with the hypervariable region of HLA B27 was observed (
Fig. 5).
When transgenic mice were created to express human HLA B27 and challenged with cross-reactive peptides derived from proteins of such bacteria, immune responses occurred with inflammatory cells localized to joints and vertebral columns in approximately 40% of inoculated mice (M. B. A. Oldstone, S. Shyp, P. Peterson, and D. LaFace, unpublished observations;
Fig. 5). Patients with AS showed antibodies in their circulation that cross-reacted with both the hypervariable region of HLA-B27 as well as a closely homologous sequence from K. pneumoniae nitrogenase (43, 44). Subsequently, a transgenic rat model was developed in which expression of HLA-B27 was associated with a clinical and histopathologic picture reminiscent of AS (45). AS-like disease occurred in rats in a normal vivarium and did not occur in rats housed in germ-free conditions (23). When germ-free rats were colonized with bacteria, they developed arthritis (46). Besides molecular mimicry, other investigators (23, 46) raised the possibility that HLA B27 may be associated with delayed or disordered clearance of the associated bacterial pathogens.
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To apply a greater degree of specificity and a more stringent approach to the study of molecular mimicry and potential associated diseases (32), Wucherpfennig and Strominger (47) as well as Hammer et al. (48) imposed a structural requirement for molecular mimicry searches. Wucherpfennig and Strominger used the known structure for MHC class II disease-associated molecules with peptide binding and TCR for a known immunodominant myelin basic protein peptide. By database search, a panel of 129 peptides from microbes were obtained that matched the molecular mimicry motif, and these were tested on several T cell clones obtained from the cerebral spinal fluid of multiple sclerosis patients (47). Eight peptides (seven of viral and one of bacterial origin) were found to efficiently activate three of these clones, whereas only one of the eight peptides would have been identified as an appropriate molecular mimic by sequence alignment. These observations indicated that a single T cell receptor could recognize several distinct but structurally related peptides from multiple pathogens, suggesting more permissivity for TCR than previously appreciated, an observation supported by other recent reports (4951). Hammer et al. (48) analyzed the possible peptide motifs that bound to HLA-DR ß chain associated with autoimmune disease. The influence of single key residues was tested by using site-directed mutations. A selection of peptides binding to rheumatoid arthritis-linked DR allotypes was shown to be critical for position aa 71 of DR ß and 57 of DQ ß (48). Extension of these findings to IDDM (47, 48) suggested that IDDM `autoimmune' peptide would bear a negative charge at P9 in order to bind preferentially to diabetes-associated DQ allele. In toto, these findings should assist in identification of potential peptides (self? viral? microbe?) associated with the pathogenesis of autoimmune disease. One variation on this theme to help explain MHC linkage with autoimmune disease and infectious agents is that MHC-derived self peptides prominent in selecting the T cell repertoire may be mutated and/or share immunologic cross-reactive epitopes with microbial antigens. Others (51) have shown that a six amino acid peptide can sensitize myelin basic protein-specific T cells to cause EAE and have used this information to identify viral and bacterial proteins (peptides) that share similar amino acids. Of interest will be experiments using such viral or microbial agents to initiate/potentiate or perhaps block the autoimmune EAE disease.
| USING MOLECULAR MIMICRY MODELS TO DISSECT THE PARAMETERS REQUIRED FOR THE ACTIVATION AND ASSOCIATION OF VIRUS-INDUCED AUTOIMMUNE DISEASE |
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or activation molecules such as B7.1 in the target (ß cells) area. 2) Infection by the same virus from which the `self' protein was used as a transgene or a closely related virus that both cross-reacts and induces sufficient effector cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) also causes the autoimmune disease. 3) If the transgene is expressed only in the target tissue, the autoimmune disease occurs rapidly, with kinetics of disease occurring by 104 days. Such positively selected high affinity effector T cells kill beta cells in the islets of Langerhans. The effector cell is a CD8 CTL and killing is dependent on perforin and interferon-
. However, if the transgene is also expressed in the thymus, then the kinetics for initiation of disease after viral infection is prolonged. 4) Depending on the MHC haplotype, disease takes between 1 and 7 months to occur. 5) Whereas the rapid-onset autoimmune disease uses high affinity effector CTL, in contrast to the slow-onset autoimmune disease, the majority of high affinity T cells have been selected out in the thymus (negative selection) and only low affinity cells are available in the periphery to participate in causing the autoimmune disease. 6) For low affinity CD8+ T cells to produce disease, they require help from CD4, but such help is not necessary for the rapid-onset disease. 7) Expression of Th.2 cytokine such as interleukin 4 (IL-4) retards the autoimmune diabetes.
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These observations allow the design of therapeutic approaches to halt the virus-induced IDDM. When the cytokine profile in the islets of Langerhans milieu was changed from a Th.1 to a Th.2 phenotype (
-interferon to IL-4, TGF-ß), IDDM was blocked even though this therapy had no demonstrable effect on precursor frequency of the effector CD8+ CTL (58; R. Mueller-Hoenger, M. G. von Herrath, X. Zhang, G. Patstone, T. Krahl, B. Coon, M. B. A. Oldstone, and N. Sarvetnick, unpublished results). A second successful therapeutic approach was to design a peptide that could bind at high affinity to the MHC allele involved in the IDDM (59; M. G. von Herrath, B. Coon, H. Mazarguil, J. E. Gairin, and M. B. A. Oldstone, unpublished results). IDDM did not occur by this means; CD4+ and CD8+ T cells did not accumulate in the islets, but were found around them (peri-islitis). Further, the precursor frequency of the effector CD8+ T cells was diminished by several-fold, below a level required to cause IDDM. Another successful approach was to abort the expression of MHC class I molecule by coexpressing the E3 transcriptional complex of adenovirus in ß cells of the islets of Langerhans (60). The focal reduction of MHC class I expression in the islets was associated with a normal precursor frequency of CD8+ CTLs in the spleen and blood. However, effector T cells did not localize in the islets, destruction of islets did not occur, and IDDM did not develop.
In addition to uncovering the pathogenetic mechanisms and providing therapeutic design to control the autoimmune disease, the transgenic model also proved efficacious for analysis of `self' determinants that may be associated with or potentiate the autoimmune disease. In the transgenic model used (
Fig. 6), since the specific amino acids required to bind to the MHC allele associated with the IDDM, as well as their binding motif, are known and fit within the MHC groove and residue recognition by TCR (59, 61, 62), a database search not dissimilar from the approach used by Wucherpfennig and Strominger (47) was undertaken. Twenty-one host self peptides were uncovered, synthesized, and studied for their direct binding to the Db MHC allele. Those showing high affinity binding (by competition assay, <100 nM) were then selected. As the effector CD8 T cell (antiviral) (anti-`self') was known, the ability of the peptide to stimulate the auto(viral) T cell and cause it to proliferate, release cytokines, or lyse a `self' peptide-coated target was determined and the ability of such activated T cells to transfer disease was monitored (M. B. A. Oldstone, J. E. Gairin, and M. G. von Herrath, unpublished results). Thus, there is the opportunity to obtain autoreactive T cells to `self' antigen and use this information to uncover the infectious agent that initiated (was associated with) the autoimmune process.
In summary, molecular mimicry is but one mechanism by which autoimmune diseases can occur in association with infectious agents. The concept of molecular mimicry remains a viable hypothesis for framing questions and approaches to uncover the initiating infectious agent as well as recognizing the `self' determinant, understanding the pathogenetic mechanism(s) involved, and designing strategies for treatment and prevention of autoimmune disorders. The availability of computer databanks, structural information on specific MHC alleles, MHC mapping to particular autoimmune diseases, and the ability to identify the anchoring and flanking sequences of a peptide that binds to that MHC allele or bind to the TCR provide the opportunity to critically evaluate and identify microbial causes of autoimmune diseases. The application and use of transgenic models designed to evaluate molecular mimicry offer the opportunity to understand the sequence of events leading to the pathology and design of specific and unique therapies in order to reverse or prevent the autoimmune process and disease.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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2 Abbreviations: MHC, major histocompatibility complex; MS, multiple sclerosis; IDDM, insulin-independent diabetes mellitus; AS, ankylosing spondylitis; TCR, T cell recognition; HBVP, hepatitis B virus polymerase; MG, myasthenia gravis; AChR, acetylcholine receptor; GAD, glutamate decarboxylase; CTL, cytotoxic T lymphocyte; IL, interleukin. ![]()
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D. C. Lenz, L. Lu, S. B. Conant, N. A. Wolf, H. C. Gerard, J. A. Whittum-Hudson, A. P. Hudson, and R. H. Swanborg A Chlamydia pneumoniae-Specific Peptide Induces Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis in Rats J. Immunol., August 1, 2001; 167(3): 1803 - 1808. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. Amrani, P. Serra, J. Yamanouchi, J. D. Trudeau, R. Tan, J. F. Elliott, and P. Santamaria Expansion of the Antigenic Repertoire of a Single T Cell Receptor upon T Cell Activation J. Immunol., July 15, 2001; 167(2): 655 - 666. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. P. Deshpande, S. Lee, M. Zheng, B. Song, D. Knipe, J. A. Kapp, and B. T. Rouse Herpes Simplex Virus-Induced Keratitis: Evaluation of the Role of Molecular Mimicry in Lesion Pathogenesis J. Virol., April 1, 2001; 75(7): 3077 - 3088. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
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H. S. Hiemstra, N. C. Schloot, P. A. van Veelen, S. J. M. Willemen, K. L. M. C. Franken, J. J. van Rood, R. R. P. de Vries, A. Chaudhuri, P. O. Behan, J. W. Drijfhout, et al. Cytomegalovirus in autoimmunity: T cell crossreactivity to viral antigen and autoantigen glutamic acid decarboxylase PNAS, March 27, 2001; 98(7): 3988 - 3991. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. M. Anderton, C. G. Radu, P. A. Lowrey, E. S. Ward, and D. C. Wraith Negative Selection during the Peripheral Immune Response to Antigen J. Exp. Med., December 27, 2000; 193(1): 1 - 12. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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, von, , , , and In Situ Tolerance within the Central Nervous System As a Mechanism for Preventing J. Exp. Med., September 18, 2000; 192(6): 871 - 880. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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I. R Mackay Science, medicine, and the future: Tolerance and autoimmunity BMJ, July 8, 2000; 321(7253): 93 - 96. [Full Text] |
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D. Jain, K. Kaur, B. Sundaravadivel, and D. M. Salunke Structural and Functional Consequences of Peptide-Carbohydrate Mimicry. CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF A CARBOHYDRATE-MIMICKING PEPTIDE BOUND TO CONCANAVALIN A J. Biol. Chem., May 19, 2000; 275(21): 16098 - 16102. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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C. W. Ang, B. C. Jacobs, A. H. Brandenburg, J. D. Laman, F. G. A. van der Meche, A. D. M. E. Osterhaus, and P. A. van Doorn Cross-reactive antibodies against GM2 and CMV-infected fibroblasts in Guillain-Barre syndrome Neurology, April 11, 2000; 54(7): 1453 - 1458. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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G. RISTORI, M. SALVETTI, G. PESOLE, M. ATTIMONELLI, C. BUTTINELLI, R. MARTIN, and P. RICCIO Compositional bias and mimicry toward the nonself proteome in immunodominant T cell epitopes of self and nonself antigens FASEB J, March 1, 2000; 14(3): 431 - 438. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
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M. P Keane and J. P Lynch III Rare diseases bullet 7: Pleuropulmonary manifestations of systemic lupus erythematosus Thorax, February 1, 2000; 55(2): 159 - 166. [Full Text] |
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A. Holz, B. Bielekova, R. Martin, and M. B. A. Oldstone Myelin-Associated Oligodendrocytic Basic Protein: Identification of an Encephalitogenic Epitope and Association with Multiple Sclerosis J. Immunol., January 15, 2000; 164(2): 1103 - 1109. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. M. Skinner, E. S. Schwoebel, S. V. Prasad, M. Oguna, and B. S. Dunbar Mapping of Dominant B-Cell Epitopes of a Human Zona Pellucida Protein (ZP1) Biol Reprod, December 1, 1999; 61(6): 1373 - 1380. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
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D. Marshall, R. Sealy, M. Sangster, and C. Coleclough TH Cells Primed During Influenza Virus Infection Provide Help for Qualitatively Distinct Antibody Responses to Subsequent Immunization J. Immunol., November 1, 1999; 163(9): 4673 - 4682. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. L. Grogan, A. Kramer, A. Nogai, L. Dong, M. Ohde, J. Schneider-Mergener, and T. Kamradt Cross-Reactivity of Myelin Basic Protein-Specific T Cells with Multiple Microbial Peptides: Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis Induction in TCR Transgenic Mice J. Immunol., October 1, 1999; 163(7): 3764 - 3770. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. Blank, Y. Shoenfeld, S. Cabilly, Y. Heldman, M. Fridkin, and E. Katchalski-Katzir Prevention of experimental antiphospholipid syndrome and endothelial cell activation by synthetic peptides PNAS, April 27, 1999; 96(9): 5164 - 5168. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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D. Hudrisier, J. Riond, O. Burlet-Schiltz, M. G. von Herrath, H. Lewicki, B. Monsarrat, M. B. A. Oldstone, and J. E. Gairin Structural and Functional Identification of Major Histocompatibility Complex Class I-restricted Self-peptides as Naturally Occurring Molecular Mimics of Viral Antigens. POSSIBLE ROLE IN CD8+ T CELL-MEDIATED, VIRUS-INDUCED AUTOIMMUNE DISEASE J. Biol. Chem., May 25, 2001; 276(22): 19396 - 19403. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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