Remnant Epitopes Generating Autoimmunity: From Model to Useful Paradigm.
Remnant Epitopes Generating Autoimmunity: From Model to Useful Paradigm.
Trends Immunol. 2020 Apr 13;:
Authors: Opdenakker G, Abu El-Asrar A, Van Damme J
Abstract
Autoimmune diseases are defined as pathologies of adaptive immunity by the presence of autoantibodies or MHC-restricted autoantigen-reactive T cells. Because autoreactivity is a normal process based on mechanisms producing repertoires of antibodies and T cell receptors, crucial questions about disease mechanisms and key steps for interference have been outstanding. We defined 25 years ago the 'remnant epitopes generate autoimmunity' (REGA)-model in which extracellular proteases from innate immune cells generate autoantigens. Here, we refine the REGA-model, tested in diseases ranging from organ-specific autoimmune diseases to systemic lupus erythematosus. It now constitutes a paradigm in which remnant epitopes generate, maintain, and regulate autoimmunity; are dependent on genetic and epigenetic influences; are produced in a disease phase-specific manner; and have therapeutic implications when targeted.
PMID: 32299652 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Trends in Immunology - Category: Allergy & Immunology Authors: Opdenakker G, Abu El-Asrar A, Van Damme J Tags: Trends Immunol Source Type: research