A patient with bronchial asthma developed cholecystitis. Laboratory investigations revealed marked eosinophilia (6,615/mm3), an elevated anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody level and renal dysfunction (blood urea nitrogen 14 mg/dl, creatinine 1.4 mg/dl). Following cholecystectomy, histopathological examination revealed a marked inflammatory cell infiltrate composed mainly of eosinophils with evidence of invasion of the wall of the gall bladder and granuloma formation of arterioles.A diagnosis of Churg-Strauss syndrome was made and she was treated with 60 mg of prednisolone per day. A renal biopsy was performed one year later in view of persistent renal dysfunction. Pathological analysis revealed a pauciimmuneglomerulonephritis with interstitial changes but no crescent formation. (Internal Medicine 42: 893-896, 2003)
Summary
Pathogens including autoantigens all failed to induce systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). We, instead, studied the integrity of host's immune response that recognized pathogen. By stimulating TCR with an antigen repeatedly to levels that surpass host's steady-state response, self-organized criticality, SLE was induced in mice normally not prone to autoimmunity, wherein T follicular helper (Tfh) cells expressing the guanine nucleotide exchange factor DOCK8 on the cell surface were newly generated. DOCK8
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Tfh cells passed through TCR re-revision and induced varieties of autoantibody and lupus lesions. They existed in splenic red pulp and peripheral blood of active lupus patients, which subsequently declined after therapy. Autoantibodies and disease were healed by anti-DOCK8 antibody in the mice including SLE-model (NZBxNZW) F1 mice. Thus, DOCK8
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Tfh cells generated after repeated TCR stimulation by immunogenic form of pathogen, either exogenous or endogenous, in combination with HLA to levels that surpass system's self-organized criticality, cause SLE.
It has been suggested that human neutrophils exposed to performed immune complexes or activated complement fragments generate O2- anions in extracellular medium. In vivo studies have revealed that oxygen intermediates produced by immune complex-activated neutrophils play an important role in subsequent tissue damage. Since it is difficult to obtain direct evidence that O2- is released into plasma in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), we studied the capacities of their sera to stimulate O2- release by human neutrophils in vitro. Sera from patients with SLE significantly enhanced O2- generation by neutrophils compared to normal sera. The enhancing activity of serum in the induction of increased O2- generation correlated positively with the presence of serum immune complexes and negatively with serum complement levels. The enhancing factors were analyzed by serum fractionation on Sephadex G-200 gel filtration, and were concluded to be immune complexes of intermediate size containing an activated complement fragment.
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