Inflammatory, immune, and viral aspects of inclusion-body myositis
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Abstract
Muscle biopsies from patients with sporadic inclusion-body myositis (sIBM) consistently demonstrate that the inflammatory T cells almost invariably invade intact (not vacuolated) fibers, whereas the vacuolated fibers are rarely invaded by T cells. This indicates two concurrently ongoing processes, an autoimmune mediated by cytotoxic T cells and a degenerative manifested by the vacuolated muscle fibers and deposits of amyloid-related proteins. The autoimmune features of IBM are highlighted by the strong association of the disease with: a) HLA I, II antigens, in frequency identical to classic autoimmune diseases; b) other autoimmune disorders in up to 32% of the patients, autoantibodies, paraproteinemias, or immunodeficiency; c) HIV and HTLV-I infection with increasingly recognized frequency (up to 13 known cases); and d) antigen-specific, cytotoxic, and clonally expanded CD8+ autoinvasive T cells with rearranged T-cell receptor genes that persist over time, even in different muscles, and invade muscle fibers expressing MHC-I antigen and costimulatory molecules. In contrast to IBM, in various dystrophies the inflammatory cells are clonally diverse and the muscle fibers do not express MHC-I or costimulatory molecules in the pattern seen in IBM. Like other chronic autoimmune conditions with coexisting inflammatory and degenerative features (i.e., primary progressive MS), IBM is resistant to conventional immunotherapies. Recent data suggest that strong anti-T cell therapies can be promising and they are the focus of ongoing research.
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You May Also be Interested in
- Article
- Abstract
- Immunogenetics and association with other autoimmune disorders.
- Association with dysproteinemia, paraproteinemia, and immunodeficiency.
- Association with retroviral infections (HIV, HTLV-1).
- Sensitized autoinvasive cytotoxic CD8+ T cells: an immunologic synapse formation with the MHC-I-expressing muscle fibers.
- Rearrangement of the TCR gene of the endomysial T cells.
- Presence of costimulatory molecules.
- Upregulation of cytokines, cytokine signaling, chemokines, and metalloproteinases.
- Vacuolated fibers and amyloids in s-IBM: relation to inflammation.
- Reconciling the immunopathogenesis of IBM with the relative resistance to conventional immunotherapies.
- Footnotes
- References
- Figures & Data
- Info & Disclosures
Dr. Dennis Bourdette and Dr. Lindsey Wooliscroft
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