首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), a leading cause of heart failure and heart transplantation in younger adults, is characterized by dilatation and impaired contraction of the left or both ventricles; it may be idiopathic, familial/genetic (20–30%), viral, and/or immune. On endomyocardial biopsy there is chronic inflammation in 30–40% of cases. Mutations in genes encoding myocyte structural proteins, cardiotoxic noxae and infectious agents are known causes; due to high aetiologic and genetic heterogeneity, the gene defects identified so far account for a tiny proportion of the familial cases. In at least two thirds of patients, DCM remains idiopathic. Myocarditis may be idiopathic, infectious or autoimmune and may heal or lead to DCM. Circulating heart-reactive autoantibodies are found in myocarditis/DCM patients and symptom-free relatives at higher frequency than in normal or noninflammatory heart disease control groups. These autoantibodies are directed against multiple antigens, some of which are expressed only in the heart (organ-specific); some autoantibodies have functional effects on cardiac myocytes in vitro as well as in animal models. Depletion of nonantigen-specific antibodies by extracorporeal immunoadsorption is associated with improved ventricular function and reduced cardiac symptoms in some DCM patients, suggesting that autoantibodies may also have a functional role in humans. Immunosuppression seems beneficial in patients who are virus-negative and cardiac autoantibody positive. Prospective family studies have shown that cardiac-specific autoantibodies are present in at least 60% of both familial and non familial pedigrees and predict DCM development among asymptomatic relatives, years before clinical and echocardiographic evidence of disease. Animal models have shown that autoimmune myocarditis/DCM can be induced by virus as well as reproduced by immunization with a well-characterized autoantigen, cardiac myosin. Thus, in a substantial proportion of patients, myocarditis and DCM represent different stages of an organ-specific autoimmune disease, that represents the final common pathogenetic pathway of infectious and noninfectious myocardial injuries in genetically predisposed individuals.  相似文献   

2.
Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), a leading cause of heart failure and heart transplantation in younger adults, is characterized by dilatation and impaired contraction of the left or both ventricles; it may be idiopathic, familial/genetic (20-30%), viral, and/or immune. On endomyocardial biopsy there is chronic inflammation in 30-40% of cases. Mutations in genes encoding myocyte structural proteins, cardiotoxic noxae and infectious agents are known causes; due to high aetiologic and genetic heterogeneity, the gene defects identified so far account for a tiny proportion of the familial cases. In at least two thirds of patients, DCM remains idiopathic. Myocarditis may be idiopathic, infectious or autoimmune and may heal or lead to DCM. Circulating heart-reactive autoantibodies are found in myocarditis/DCM patients and symptom-free relatives at higher frequency than in normal or noninflammatory heart disease control groups. These autoantibodies are directed against multiple antigens, some of which are expressed only in the heart (organ-specific); some autoantibodies have functional effects on cardiac myocytes in vitro as well as in animal models. Depletion of nonantigen-specific antibodies by extracorporeal immunoadsorption is associated with improved ventricular function and reduced cardiac symptoms in some DCM patients, suggesting that autoantibodies may also have a functional role in humans. Immunosuppression seems beneficial in patients who are virus-negative and cardiac autoantibody positive. Prospective family studies have shown that cardiac-specific autoantibodies are present in at least 60% of both familial and non familial pedigrees and predict DCM development among asymptomatic relatives, years before clinical and echocardiographic evidence of disease. Animal models have shown that autoimmune myocarditis/DCM can be induced by virus as well as reproduced by immunization with a well-characterized autoantigen, cardiac myosin. Thus, in a substantial proportion of patients, myocarditis and DCM represent different stages of an organ-specific autoimmune disease, that represents the final common pathogenetic pathway of infectious and noninfectious myocardial injuries in genetically predisposed individuals.  相似文献   

3.
Familial aggregation is a feature of myocarditis and dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). Myocarditis, a clinically polymorphic inflammatory disease of the myocardium, is diagnosed by endomyocardial biopsy (EMB) and may lead to DCM. Mutations in several genes encoding myocyte structural proteins are known monogenic DCM causes, but because of high etiologic and genetic heterogeneity, the gene defects identified so far account for a minority of cases. In the last decade, it has been discovered that autoimmunity plays a pivotal role in myocarditis and DCM that are thought to represent different stages of an organ-specific autoimmune disease in genetically predisposed individuals. None of the available genetic studies in familial DCM has taken into account the autoimmune phenotype markers in the characterization of index patients and relatives, thus it is not known whether or not the described gene defects are involved in the autoimmune form of the disease. In animal models autoimmune myocarditis/DCM can be induced by viral infection, immunization with heart-specific autoantigens, or develop spontaneously in genetically predisposed strains. It may be cell or antibody-mediated; susceptibility is based upon multiple MHC and non-MHC genes. In patients, the diagnosis of autoimmune myocarditis/DCM requires exclusion of viral genome on EMB and detection of serum heart-reactive autoantibodies. They are found in index patients and relatives from about 60% of both familial and non-familial pedigrees and predict DCM development among healthy relatives. Some antibodies have functional effects on cardiac myocytes in vitro, in animal models and possibly in a DCM subset without inflammation, responsive to extracorporeal immunoadsorption. Cardiac-specific autoantibodies, which are shown to be disease-specific for myocarditis/DCM, can be used as biomarkers for identifying patients in whom, in the absence of active infection of the myocardium, immunosuppression and/or immunomodulation may be beneficial and their relatives at risk. Future studies should clarify genetic basis of human autoimmune myocarditis/DCM as well as genotype/immune phenotype correlations.  相似文献   

4.
From infection to autoimmunity   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
We have investigated two models of virally-induced autoimmune myocarditis in mice using widely different infectious agents. Infection of susceptible BALB/c mice with either Coxsackievirus or murine cytomegalovirus results in the development of acute myocarditis from day 7-14 after infection, and chronic myocarditis from day 28 onwards. The chronic phase of myocarditis is associated with mononuclear infiltration of the myocardium and the production of autoantibodies to cardiac myosin, although infectious virus cannot be detected past day 14 of infection. T cells and autoantibodies have been shown to be important for the development of autoimmune myocarditis. Many researchers have investigated the role of molecular mimicry in the development of myocarditis after viral infection. This review explores the 'adjuvant' effect of infection on the innate immune response and how this determines the progression to autoimmune disease. We show that NK cells protect against the development of disease, while complement and complement receptors are involved in the development of autoimmune myocarditis induced by inoculation with virus or cardiac myosin, respectively. Our results suggest that the innate immune response to viral and self-antigens may determine whether susceptible strains of mice progress to chronic autoimmune disease. These findings have broad implications for understanding the role of infection in inducing autoimmune disease.  相似文献   

5.
Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is a myocardial disease characterized by progressive depression of myocardial contractile function and by ventricular dilatation. Abnormalities of the cellular and humoral immune system are present in patients with myocarditis and DCM. Various circulating cardiac autoantibodies have been detected among patients suffering from DCM. The relative contribution of cardiac antibodies to cardiac malfunction in DCM remains to be elucidated. Extraction of antibodies by immunoadsorption has been successfully used for treatment of various autoimmune diseases. In this review we report recent studies, which indicate that immunoadsorption improves cardiac function of patients with DCM. The data from these studies indicate that activation of the humoral immune system, with production of cardiac autoantibodies, may play a functional role in cardiac malfunction of patients with DCM.  相似文献   

6.
Genetic complexity of autoimmune myocarditis   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Autoimmune myocarditis, a chronic stage of myocardial inflammation, occurs in a small subset of patients after acute cardiotropic viral infection and can lead to dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). This disease can be recapitulated in susceptible mouse strains by infection with coxsackievirus B3, or by immunization with cardiac myosin or cardiac troponin I. The etiologies of myocarditis are multifactorial and genetically complex. Genetic linkage between susceptibility to myocarditis/DCM and the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes has been reported in both humans and experimentally induced mouse models. However, unlike other autoimmune diseases, the non-MHC genes seem to have greater impact than MHC genes on disease susceptibility. Several myocarditis-related non-MHC loci have been identified by our laboratory and others in different models. Most of these loci overlap with other autoimmune disease susceptibility loci, suggesting common or shared genetic traits influencing general autoimmunity. For example, we have demonstrated that Eam1 and Eam2 may influence disease susceptibility via regulating T cell apoptosis at different developmental stages. Blockade of signaling through specific genes, such as CTLA4, ICOS and PD-1, can either enhance or prevent the development of experimental autoimmune myocarditis, but it remains unclear whether functional polymorphisms in these genes are involved in predisposition to disease. In humans, mutations/deletions in immunologically important genes such as CD45, and genes encoding cardiac proteins, have been reported in patients with recurrent myocarditis or DCM. Identification of genetic polymorphisms controlling autoimmune myocarditis will help us understand the mechanisms underlying autoimmune diseases in general, thereby improving potential therapies in patients.  相似文献   

7.
Myocarditis is a common clinical cardiovascular disease, and some patients progress to dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) with chronic heart failure. Common viral infections are the most frequent cause of myocarditis, but other pathogens and autoimmune diseases have also been implicated. T(h)17 cells are novel IL-17-producing effector T helper cells that play an important role in the development of autoimmune myocarditis. Furthermore, IL-17 is also important in post-myocarditis cardiac remodeling and progression to DCM. However, the mechanisms whereby IL-17 and IL-17-producing cells promote the progression of cardiac fibrosis remain unclear. We therefore investigated whether IL-17 directly induced cardiac fibrosis in experimental autoimmune myocarditis (EAM) and explored the possible molecular mechanisms. The EAM model was induced and serum IL-17 level was detected by ELISA; western blot, immunofluorescence and sirius red staining were used to analyze the collagen expression. PCR was used to assay the IL-17RA and IL-17RC. The results indicated that IL-17 induced cardiac fibrosis both in vitro and in vivo. The protein kinase C (PKC)β/Erk1/2/NF-κB (Nuclear Factor κappa B) pathway was involved in the development of myocardial fibrosis and IL-17 contributed to cardiac fibrosis following EAM via this pathway. These results provide the first direct evidence for the involvement of the PKCβ/Erk1/2/NF-κB signaling pathway in IL-17-induced myocardial fibrosis.  相似文献   

8.
Chronic myocarditis often progresses to dilated cardiomyopathy resulting in heart failure or cardiac transplantation. Viral infection is the most common cause of myocarditis and coxsackie B viruses (CBV) are the most frequently cited etiologic agents associated with myocarditis and cardiomyopathy. Additionally, CBV infections of genetically susceptible mice induce autoimmune myocarditis resembling human disease, including the development of autoantibodies to cardiac myosin. Herein, we describe experiments in which peripheral tolerance to cardiac myosin was induced by administration of antigen-coupled antigen presenting cells. While the antibody response to cardiac myosin following CB3 infection was reduced, the viral induction of clinical autoimmune myocarditis was not affected. Additionally, viral replication was unaffected by the reduced humoral response to cardiac myosin. Therefore, the humoral response to cardiac myosin is not required for the development of autoimmunity following infection of NOD mice. This work demonstrates the difficulty in using antigen specific tolerance as a course of treatment to prevent multivalent autoimmune disorders.  相似文献   

9.
Myocarditis, often initiated by viral infection, may progress to autoimmune inflammatory heart disease, dilated cardiomyopathy and heart failure. Although cardiac myosin is a dominant autoantigen in animal models of myocarditis and is released from the heart during viral myocarditis, the characterization, role and significance of anti-cardiac myosin autoantibodies is poorly defined. In our study, we define the human cardiac myosin epitopes in human myocarditis and cardiomyopathies and establish a mechanism to explain how anti-cardiac myosin autoantibodies may contribute to heart disease. We show that autoantibodies to cardiac myosin in sera from myocarditis and dilated cardiomyopathies in humans targeted primarily epitopes in the S2 hinge region of cardiac myosin. In addition, anti-cardiac myosin antibodies in sera or purified IgG from myocarditis and cardiomyopathy targeted the beta-adrenergic receptor and induced antibody-mediated cAMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA) cell signaling activity in heart cells. Antibody-mediated PKA activity in sera was abrogated by absorption with anti-human IgG. Antibody-mediated cell signaling of PKA was blocked by antigen-specific inhibition by human cardiac myosin or the beta-adrenergic receptor but not the alpha adrenergic receptor or bovine serum albumin. Propranolol, a beta blocker and inhibitor of the beta-adrenergic receptor pathway also blocked the antibody-mediated signaling of the beta-adrenergic receptor and PKA. The data suggest that IgG antibody against human cardiac myosin reacts with the beta-adrenergic receptor and triggers PKA signaling in heart cells. In summary, we have identified a new class of crossreactive autoantibodies against human cardiac myosin and the beta-adrenergic receptor in the heart. In addition, we have defined disease specific peptide epitopes in the human cardiac myosin rod S2 region in human myocarditis and cardiomyopathy as well as a mechanistic role of autoantibody in the pathogenesis of disease.  相似文献   

10.
Autoimmune myocarditis: cellular mediators of cardiac dysfunction   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
Immune mediators play a critical role in the pathogenesis and outcomes of a number of cardiac diseases. This review summarizes recent findings on the composition of the inflammatory infiltrate and the role of different types and subtypes of immune cells and their products in mediating cardiac dysfunction in experimental autoimmune myocarditis (EAM). CD4+ T cells are required for initiation of myocarditis and their numbers in the heart infiltrate correlate with systolic dysfunction during disease progression. Other immune cells, including CD8+ T cells, granulocytes, and mast cells, can directly affect cardiomyocyte function. When regulatory mechanisms fail, the local damage leads to cardiomyocyte death, replacement fibrosis and overall cardiac dysfunction. EAM provides insights into the role of the immune system in the development of dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and heart failure and may serve as a general paradigm for autoimmune organ-specific tissue damage.  相似文献   

11.
Myocarditis is a potentially lethal inflammatory heart disease of children and young adults that frequently leads to dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). Since diagnostic procedures and efficient therapies are lacking, it is important to characterize the critical immune effector pathways underlying the initial cardiac inflammation and the transition from myocarditis to DCM. We describe here a T-cell receptor (TCR) transgenic mouse model with spontaneously developing autoimmune myocarditis that progresses to lethal DCM. Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging revealed early inflammation-associated changes in the ventricle wall including transient thickening of the left ventricle wall. Furthermore, we found that IFN-γ was a major effector cytokine driving the initial inflammatory process and that the cooperation of IFN-γ and IL-17A was essential for the development of the progressive disease. This novel TCR transgenic mouse model permits the identification of the central pathophysiological and immunological processes involved in the transition from autoimmune myocarditis to DCM.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is a heterogeneous group of myocardial diseases clinically defined by the presence of left ventricular dilatation and contractile dysfunction. Among various causes of DCM, a progression from viral myocarditis to DCM has long been hypothesized. Supporting this possibility, studies by endomyocardial biopsy, the only method to obtain a definite diagnosis of myocarditis at present, have provided evidence of inflammation in the myocardium in DCM patients. A number of experimental studies have elucidated a cell‐mediated autoimmune mechanism triggered by viral infection in the progression of myocarditis to DCM. In addition, the important role of inflammation in the pathogenesis of heart failure has been recognized, and many terms including myocarditis, inflammatory cardiomyopathy, and inflammatory DCM have been used for myocardial diseases associated with inflammation. This review discusses the pathophysiology of inflammation in the myocardium, and refers to diagnosis and treatment based on these concepts.  相似文献   

14.
Myocardial dilatation and dysfunction in the absence of significant coronary heart disease has been termed “idiopathic” dilated cardiomyopathy (iDCM), which—according to the 1995 task force report on the classification of cardiomyopathies—besides genetic, toxic or infectious causes also includes immune-mediated heart muscle damage in the spectrum of putative DCM etiologies. Incremental research on this topic particularly in the past few years has significantly contributed evidence to the hypothesis that autoimmune reactions against certain myocyte antigens may play a pivotal role in the initiation and/or progression of DCM. Recent transfer experiments in animals (mostly rodents) performed by various groups throughout the world and some preliminary clinical data even indicate that a few of these autoantibodies are indeed “pathogenic”, inferring that they can actually cause cardiac dysfunction and heart failure by their own. Dependent on the individual genetic predisposition such harmful autoimmune reactions are supposed to emerge as a consequence of heart muscle damage induced by viral triggers, ischemia or exposure to cardiotoxins leading to myocyte apoptosis (and/or necrosis) and subsequent liberation of a “critical amount” of self-antigens previously hidden to the immune system.

The following article will summarize the so far available evidence for an implication of a confined number of harmful autoantibodies directed against specific cardiac antigens in the pathogenesis of DCM.  相似文献   

15.
N Neu  B Ploier 《Autoimmunity》1991,8(4):317-322
Immunization with cardiac myosin in complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA) induces severe autoimmune myocarditis in A H-2 congenic mouse strains. The disease shares a variety of characteristics with Coxsackie-virus B3 (CB3)-induced myocarditis and is strongly associated with high-titered autoantibodies to cardiac myosin. Using the spot ELISA-technique, we demonstrate here that in cardiac myosin-immunized mice myosin autoantibodies were not only produced within the spleen, but also at the site of the autoimmune attack, i.e., within the inflammatory heart infiltrate. At the level of single plasma cells we further showed that a substantial part of the myosin autoantibodies was specific for the cardiac myosin isoform, thereby supporting previous serologic data. The finding that cells of the inflammatory heart infiltrate significantly contribute to autoantibody production might explain why the occurrence of high-titered myosin autoantibodies is restricted to mice which develop the disease.  相似文献   

16.
Myocardial dilatation and dysfunction in the absence of significant coronary heart disease has been termed "idiopathic" dilated cardiomyopathy (iDCM), which--according to the 1995 task force report on the classification of cardiomyopathies-besides genetic, toxic or infectious causes also includes immune-mediated heart muscle damage in the spectrum of putative DCM etiologies. Incremental research on this topic particularly in the past few years has significantly contributed evidence to the hypothesis that autoimmune reactions against certain myocyte antigens may play a pivotal role in the initiation and/or progression of DCM. Recent transfer experiments in animals (mostly rodents) performed by various groups throughout the world and some preliminary clinical data even indicate that a few of these autoantibodies are indeed "pathogenic", inferring that they can actually cause cardiac dysfunction and heart failure by their own. Dependent on the individual genetic predisposition such harmful autoimmune reactions are supposed to emerge as a consequence of heart muscle damage induced by viral triggers, ischemia or exposure to cardiotoxins leading to myocyte apoptosis (and/or necrosis) and subsequent liberation of a "critical amount" of self-antigens previously hidden to the immune system. The following article will summarize the so far available evidence for an implication of a confined number of harmful autoantibodies directed against specific cardiac antigens in the pathogenesis of DCM.  相似文献   

17.
Idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is a disease of putative autoimmune origin that kills males at a twofold to threefold greater frequency than females. The reasons underlying these differential outcomes may be related to sex-divergent self-recognition. Here we examined sex-specific autoimmune responses to cardiac self and their impact on DCM development. We found that males immunized to the p406-425 peptide derived from mouse cardiac alpha-myosin heavy chain preferentially develop a predominant Th17 lineage response that provides sustained T-cell memory and a high DCM incidence whereas females preferentially develop a predominant Th1 lineage response that becomes anergized to cardiac self resulting in compensatory protection against DCM. The distinct sex-defined disease phenotypes are interchangeable after in vivo manipulation of Th1 (interleukin-2) and Th17 (interleukin-17) cytokines. Our study shows that male and female SWXJ mice differentially respond to cardiac self in ways that lead to distinct autoimmune outcomes and implies that optimized therapy for autoimmunity may require consideration of the qualitatively different ways that males and females engage self.  相似文献   

18.
Anti-beta1-adrenoceptor (beta1AR) autoantibodies have been shown to be pathophysiologically important in idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). Treatment with intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) has shown beneficial effects in both DCM and ischemic cardiomyopathy. However, the underlying mechanism has not been clarified. In the present study, we therefore examined whether the improvement of cardiac function was due to neutralization of functional beta1AR autoantibodies by anti-idiotypic antibodies. Autoantibodies against the beta1AR was analysed in sera from patients with DCM and coronary artery disease (CAD) treated with IVIG or placebo before, 6 and 12 months. Six month after treatment, DCM patients showed increase in beta1AR autoantibodies, mostly in IgG1 and IgG2, whereas in CAD patients mostly in IgG2. No changes in beta1AR autoantibodies after 12 months were detected. In summary, our results indicate that improvement of cardiac function by IVIG is not due to neutralization of beta1AR autoantibodies.  相似文献   

19.
Organ-specific surface-reactive antibodies to viable human adrenal cell suspensions from adult or fetal glands were detected by indirect immunofluorescence (IFL) in 24 out of 28 idiopathic Addison's disease sera with adrenal cytoplasmic antibodies. Cell-surface reactions were also present in nine out of 10 cases of polyendocrine autoimmune disorders without overt adrenal failure but possessing adrenal cytoplasmic antibodies. None of 18 Addisonian patients, 25 cases with other autoimmune disorders and 10 normal individuals, all negative for adrenal cytoplasmic antibodies, showed positive surface reactions on viable cells. When the surface IFL was done on established monolayers, the positive sera gave variable staining suggesting that more than one antigen may be expressed under different conditions. These results suggest that adrenal-specific 'microsomal' antigens are also represented on the plasma membrane, and support the hypothesis that organ-specific autoantibodies reacting with the surface of living target cells may have a pathogenic role in the development of autoimmune adrenalitis.  相似文献   

20.
Postinfection sera from A.CA/SnJ A.SW/SnJ, B10.S/SgSf, and B10.PL/SgSf mouse strains which varied in their susceptibility to Coxsackievirus B3-induced immunopathology were suspected to contain autoantibodies against cardiac tissue. These sera were used to identify the target myocardial autoantigen(s). Sera pools were made during the peak of the early, virus-induced myocarditis at 5 and 7 days and during the peak of the late, immunopathic phase of myocarditis at Days 15 and 21 after infection. Only the A.CA/SnJ and A.SW/SnJ strains which develop the immunopathic heart disease had heart-specific autoantibodies as determined by indirect immunofluorescence. This panel of sera pools was then tested against solubilized extracts from whole heart and skeletal muscles. Results from Western immunoblotting analyses demonstrated that antibodies to myosin were a prominent feature in the sera of strains which developed immunopathic myocarditis. The immunopathic sera pools were subsequently assayed against low-salt, high-salt, and a number of detergent extracts of heart and skeletal muscle. Anti-myosin was still the most notable reactivity, even though other autoantigens were detected. Absorption with cardiac myosin removed the vast majority of heart reactivity from the pooled sera derived from the A.CA/SnJ and A.SW/SnJ strains as determined within the limitations of the immunofluorescent and immunochemical assays. Both sarcolemmal and A-band staining patterns were abolished by the cardiac myosin absorption. These studies suggest that myosin is one of the major autoantigens in Coxsackievirus B3-induced autoimmune myocarditis.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号