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Title: Lecture set 2


1
Lecture set 2
2
Endocrine autoimmunity
  • By know you should be getting the feeling that
    the endocrine system is everywhere and interacts
    with everything!
  • As it says in your text it is estimated 1 person
    in 30 suffers from some type of recognized
    autoimmune disease.
  • There is therefore a strong interaction between
    the endocrine system and the immune system.
  • These interactions can be temporary sometimes
    permanent.

3
Autoimmune diseases form a spectrum ranging from
organ-specific conditions in which one organ only
is affected to systemic diseases in which the
pathology is diffused throughout the body. The
extremes of this spectrum result from quite
distinct underlying mechanisms, but there are
many conditions in which there are components of
both organ-specific and systemic damage. . Some
pathologies work by shutting a system down
others by hyper stimulating it.
4
Autoimmunity
  • Although the immune system has an elaborate
    system of checks and balances to ensure self
    tolerance, occasionally this system breaks down.
    When the immune system attacks host components
    causing pathological change, this is called
    autoimmunity. Many people experience an
    autoimmune reaction during their lifetime. Mostly
    these are short-lived, self-resolving sequelae of
    infection. However in some 5 of individuals the
    reaction is chronic, debilitating and even
    (rarely) life-threatening. It is these latter
    conditions where serious immunopathology occurs
    which are usually considered autoimmune disease.
    We shall consider the following aspects
  • The characteristics of autoimmune diseases
  • Which immune mechanisms are involved in bringing
    about the pathogenic change?
  • What factors initiate the autoreactivity?

5
Autoantibodies - cause or effect?
  • Almost all patients presenting with autoimmune
    conditions have some autoantibodies present in
    their serum. However they also have autoreactive
    T cells present (though these are far harder to
    demonstrate experimentally). It is not always
    known whether the autoantibodies play an
    important role in the disease or are a secondary
    result of the tissue damage which has been caused
    by the disease process itself. This is problem is
    particularly difficult in many organ-specific
    conditions.
  • A useful example of the contrast between diseases
    whose destructive mechanism is well understood
    and a similar condition in which it is much less
    well understood is Graves' disease and
    Hashimoto's thyroiditis.
  • Both diseases affect the thyroid gland
    specifically, in Graves' the thyroid is
    hyperactive whereas Hashimoto's results in
    thyroid hypoactivity.

6
Graves Disease
  • This is a rare example of an autoimmune disease
    which can be transferred with IgG antibodies.
    Firstly passive transfer of IgG from patients to
    rats often produces similar symptoms transiently
    in the animals. Secondly babies born to mothers
    with Graves' have shown transient symptoms of
    hyperthyroidism which disappear with catabolism
    of the maternal IgG (transferred via the
    placenta) and are relieved by plasma exchange.The
    disease causing antibodies can be shown to
    recognise the thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH)
    receptor and to stimulate thyrocytes in vitro.

7
Hashimoto's Thyroiditis
  • This disease is characterised by an intense
    mononuclear cellular infiltrate into the thyroid
    and by the presence of autoantibodies primarily
    directed at thyroglobulin and thyroid peroxidase.
    There are a number of theories about the
    mechanism of pathogenic damage to the tissue.
  • Autoreactive T cells (TH1) may cause tissue
    damage by release of cytokines, either directly
    (eg TNF) or by recruiting and activating
    macrophages, which subsequently mediate tissue
    destruction.
  • Autoreactive antibodies, whose production
    requires the help of autoreactive T cells, may be
    directly responsible for the pathology, by for
    example interfering with iodine uptake and
    binding by thyroglobulin.
  • Inflammation may cause tissue damage by
    triggering apoptosis in thyrocytes by inducing
    expression of a 'death' receptor (Fas, a molecule
    which triggers apoptotic death). Unusually the
    ligand for this 'death' receptor appears to be
    constitutively expressed by thyrocytes. It is
    also expressed by activated but not resting T
    cells.

8
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9
Endocrine factors
  • Most autoimmune disease do not occur with equal
    frequency in males and females. For example
    Graves' and Hashimoto's are 4-5 times, and SLE 10
    times, more common in females while Ankylosing
    Spondylitis is 3-4 more frequent in males.
    These differences are believed to be the result
    of hormonal influences
  • A second well documented hormonal effect is the
    marked reduction in disease severity seen in many
    autoimmune conditions during pregnancy.
    Rheumatoid arthritis is perhaps the classic
    example of this effect. In some cases there is
    also a rapid exacerbation (rebound) after giving
    birth.

10
Environment
  • However, it is clear that environmental factors
    also play a role in autoimmune disease. If you
    examine how frequently identical twins both
    develop a disease (the concordance rate), it is
    only about 20-40 for common autoimmune diseases
    such as diabetes, SLE and rheumatoid arthritis.
    This makes it highly likely that environmental
    factors must also be important. While we might
    expect factors such as diet to play a role, we
    can postulate that infectious organisms are the
    most significant environmental factor.

11
Components of the immune system
  • Made up of two cellular systems
  • humoral or circulating antiBody system - B cells
  • cell mediaTed immunity - T cells
  • Both work by identifying antigens (foreign
    proteins or polysaccharides) either as part of a
    virus or bacterium or as a partially degraded
    byproduct
  • Also recognizes human antigens not made by the
    individual resulting in graft rejection
  • The humoral antiBody system produces secreted
    antibodies (proteins) which bind to antigens and
    identify the antigen complex for destruction.
    Antibodies act on antigens in the serum and
    lymph. B-cell produced antibodies may either be
    attached to B-cell membranes or free in the serum
    and lymph.
  • The cell mediaTed system acts on antigens
    appearing on the surface of individual cells.
    T-cells produce T-cell receptors which recognize
    specific antigens bound to the antigen presenting
    structures on the surface of the presenting cell.

12
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13
Humoral AntiBody System - B lymphocytes
  • each B lymphocyte produces a distinct antibody
    molecule (immunoglobulin or Ig)
  • over a million different B lymphocytes are
    produced in each individual
  • thus, each individual can recognize over a
    million different antigens
  • the antibody molecule is composed of 2 copies of
    2 different proteins
  • there are two copies of a heavy chain - over 400
    amino acids long
  • there are two copies of a light chain - over 200
    amino acids long
  • each antibody molecule can bind 2 antigens at one
    time
  • thus, a single antibody molecule can bind to 2
    viruses which leads to clumping

14
  • Classes determined by C terminal end of heavy
    chains
  • IgM - multimeric, interact with complement, first
    response
  • IgG - monomeric, long-lived, second response,
    secreted
  • IgA - monomeric, long-lived, secreted in mucous
    surfaces
  • IgE - monomeric, triggers inflammation in attacks
    by parasites, associated with allergies, binds to
    mast cells by C terminal end of heavy chains

15
Antibody Diversity
  • Each B cell produces identical antibodies
    specific to only one antigen.
  • Millions of different antibodies can be produced
    - each produced by only one cell line.
  • The nearly limitless diversity is achieved by the
    splicing of exons in the DNA as B cells mature.
  • Light chain diversity (genes located on
    chromosomes 2 and 22) 100 V exons 4 J exons 10
    V-J joint combinations 4,000 total combinations
  • Heavy chain diversity (gene located on chromosome
    14) 300 V exons 20 D exons 4 J exons 10 D-J
    and V-DJ joint combinations and 100 possible
    base insertions in joint 24 million
    combinations
  • Combined diversity 4 x 103 light chains X 2.4 x
    107 heavy chains 9.6 x 1010

16
Going to work
  • As B cells mature, exon splicing creates a unique
    combination at a light chain gene and a heavy
    chain gene.
  • This results in a B cell capable of producing a
    specific antibody before the antigen has been
    encountered.
  • Virgin B cells display their antibodies on the
    cell surface in the form of IgM molecules.
  • If an antigen is encountered which binds well to
    a B cell antibody, the antigen is engulfed and
    then presented on the cell surface in a MHCII
    marker.
  • If a helper T cell recognizes the displayed
    antigen, the T cell induces the B cell to divide
    and differentiate antibody producing cells and
    memory cells.
  • If no helper T cell recognizes the displayed
    antigen, the B cell is not stimulated and will
    eventually die. This guards against recognition
    of self or autoimmunity.
  • B cell differentiation also involves Ig class
    switching from IgM to IgG or IgA.
  • Antibody producing cells have a limited lifetime
    and the level of antibody production goes down
    over time.
  • Memory B cells have a longer lifetime and allow
    for a quicker and more intense response to the
    next encounter with that antigen.

17
Many of the endocrine pathologies are
multi-variant
  • They often start out in one system and progress
    to others as one ages.

18
Autoimmune Polyendocrine Syndromes
  • APS-II (Autoimm Polyendocrine)
  • APS-I (AIRE mutation)
  • XPID (Scurfy Mutation)
  • Anti-insulin Receptor Abs Lupus
  • Hirata (Anti-insulin Autoantibodies)
  • POEMS Congenital Rubella DM Thyroid
  • (Plasmacytoma,..)
  • Thymic Tumors Autoimmunity

19
Polyendocrine non-Autoimmune Syndromes
  • Wolframs Syndrome DIDMOADDiabetes Insipidus,
    Diabetes Mellitus, Optic Atrophy, and Deafness
    (WFS1 gene mutation on Chromosome 4)
  • Kearns-Sayre SyndromeExternal Ophthalmoplegia,
    Retinal Degeneration, Heart Block- Diabetes,
    Hypoparathyroidism, Thyroiditis reported
    (Mitochondrial deletions, rearrangments)

20
APS-Syndromes
  • APS-Igt2 of Candidiasis, Hypopara,Addisons
  • APS-IIAddisons Autoimmune Thyroid and/or Type
    1 Diabetes
  • APS-III Thyroid Autoimmune other autoimmune
    not above
  • APS-IV Two or more organ-specific autoimmune,
    not I,II, or III.

21
Associated Autoimmune Illnesses
22
Comparison APS-I and APS-II APS-I
APS-II
  • Older Onset
  • Multiple Generations
  • DR3/4 Associated
  • No Defined Immunodeficiency
  • 20 Type 1 DM
  • Onset Infancy
  • SiblingsAIRE gene mutated
  • Not HLA Associated
  • ImmunodeficiencyAsplenismMucocutaneous
    Candidiasis
  • 18 Type 1 DM

23
APS-I
  • Autoimmune Polyendocrine Syndrome Type 1
  • Autosomal Recessive mutations AIRE (Autoimmune
    Regulator) gene
  • Mucocutaneous Candidiasis/Addisons
    Disease/Hypoparathyroidism
  • 18 Type 1 Diabetes
  • Transcription Factor in Thymus

24
Chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis
  • Heterogeneous disorder of the immune system
    characterized by persistent candida (yeast)
    infections of the mucous membranes, scalp, skin
    and nails. Patients usually have problems with
    thrush (a yeast infection in the mouth) and yeast
    diaper rash as babies. Some patients also have
    problems with additional germs including bacteria
    and other fungi. Patients with mucocutaneous
    candidiasis have an increased incidence of
    autoimmune disorders including endocrine
    disorders, diabetes, hemolytic anemia, autoimmune
    hair loss (alopecia) or loss of skin pigment
    (vitiligo).

25
  • Clinical Features and Symptoms
  • persistent candida (yeast) infections of the
    mucous membranes, scalp, skin and nails
  • thrush (a yeast infection in the mouth) and yeast
    diaper rash as babies. 
  • Some patients also have problems with
  • additional germs including bacteria and other
    fungi. 
  • increased incidence of autoimmune disorders
    including endocrine disorders, diabetes,
    hemolytic anemia, autoimmune hair loss (alopecia)
    or loss of skin pigment (vitiligo)
  • Treatment Strategies
  • Most patients with chronic mucocutaneous
    candidiasis are treated with chronic antibiotics
    that are specific for fungal infections. Patients
    should be evaluated periodically for endocrine
    disorders and those endocrine disorders should be
    treated as necessary.

26
Unusual manifestations of disease APS-I
  • Pituitary hormone deficiency (diabetes insipidus,
    growth hormone, gonoadotropic, ACTH deficiency)
  • Autoimmune disease (hyperthyroidism, rheumatoid
    arthritis, Sjogrens syndrome, periodic fever
    with rash, antisperm autoimmunity, hemolytic
    anemia)
  • Hemetologic manifestations (pure red cell
    aplasia, autoimmune hemolytic anemia,
    splenomegaly and pancytopenia, Ig A deficiency)
  • Ocular disease (iridocyclitis, optic nerve
    atrophy, retinal degeneration)
  • Other organ system involvement (nephritis,
    cholelithiasis, Bronchiolitis obliterans
    organizing pneumonia, Lymphocytic myocarditis)
  • Hypokalemia with or without hypertension
  • Metaphyseal dysostosis

27
Immunodeficiency APS-I
  • Live virus vaccination avoided
  • If splenic atrophy present (Howell-Jolly bodies
    of blood smear, ultrasound)-Pneumococcal vaccine
    with Antibody response monitoring(6-8 weeks)-If
    no antibody response daily antibiotic prophylaxis

BDC
28
Type II Syndrome Diseases
29
Autoimmune Polyendocrine Syndrome Type II
(APS-II, Schmidts Syndrome)
  • The type II syndrome is the most common
    autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome. In 1926,
    Schmidt described two subjects with thyroiditis
    and Addisons disease. Other diseases of the APS
    II include Graves disease (thyrotoxicosis),
    primary hypothyroidism, insulin-dependent or type
    1A diabetes mellitus (IDDM), celiac disease
    vitiligo serositis, IgA deficiency, primary
    hypogonadism, stiff-man syndrome, alopecia,
    pernicious anemia, myasthenia gravis, and
    Parkinsons disease. Organ-specific
    autoantibodies in the absence of overt disease is
    also frequently present in patients and their
    relatives.

30
  • Some authors divide the APS-II syndrome based
    upon the specific disease components reserving
    APS-II for Addisons disease plus autoimmune
    thyroid disease or type 1 diabetes (e.g. APS-III
    for thyroid autoimmunity plus other autoimmune
    (not Addisons or type 1 diabetes) APS-IV for
    two or more other organ specific autoimmune
    diseases). In that the additional divisions at
    present provide limited prognostic information
    (e.g. patient with diabetes and thyroiditis at
    risk for Addisons) we will use APS-II as
    inclusive of multiple autoimmune disorders with
    one or more autoimmune endocrine diseases but
    distinguished from APS-I with its unique triad of
    hypoparathyroidism, mucocutaneous candidiasis and
    Addisons disease and identified mutation of the
    AIRE gene

31
APS II Environmental Factors
  • Initiating factors for the type II syndrome and
    its component illnesses are not established
    except for celiac disease (wheat protein
    gliadin), the insulin autoimmune syndrome (e.g.
    methimizole), myasthenia gravis (rarely
    penicillamine, type 1A diabetes (rarely
    congenital rubella), Graves disease (rarely
    anti-CD52 monoclonal treating patients with
    multiple sclerosis) and hypothyroidism (rarely
    interferon).

32
  • Patients with celiac disease, which is
    characterized by atrophy of intestinal villi
    associated with lymphocytic infiltration, have
    autoantibodies reacting with transglutaminase
    (the endomysial antigen) and with less
    specificity and sensitivity with the wheat
    protein gliadin. Removal of gliadin from the diet
    restores intestinal villi to normal. In a similar
    manner, controversial data suggest that ingestion
    of the milk protein bovine albumin in the first
    few months of life may be associated with type 1
    diabetes while other investigators implicate
    casein, and recent studies from Denver and
    Germany (oral reports) implicate early (lt3
    months) ingestion of wheat. These dietary factors
    appear to increase risk of islet autoimmunity
    less than 2-3 fold. A number of drugs are
    associated with induction of autoimmunity
    including interferon-a (thyroiditis)(109).
    Remarkably , 1/3 of multiple sclerosis patients
    treated with an anti-CD52 monoclonal antibody
    developed Graves disease. Apparently
    non-multiple sclerosis patients treated with the
    same monoclonal do not develop Graves disease.

33
Autoantibodies
  • AutoantibodiesFamilies with the type II
    polyendocrine syndrome should be evaluated over
    time to detect the presence of organ-specific
    antibodies indicating the possibility of a future
    endocrine malfunction. All such relatives should
    be advised of the early symptoms and signs of the
    principal component diseases. Even though signs
    and symptoms of disease may be absent, patients
    with multiple disorders should be screened every
    few years with measurement of anti-islet
    antibodies, 21-hydroxylase autoantibodies and
    transglutaminase autoantibodies, a sensitive
    thyrotropin assay, and measurement of serum B12
    levels. ACTH and cosyntropin(adrenocorticotropin)-
    stimulated cortisol determination is indicated if
    21-hydroxylase autoantibodies are detected.
    Assays of anti-islet cell antibodies anti-thyroid
    and anti-adrenal antibodies(21-hydroxylase) and
    anti-ovarian antibodies help identify subjects at
    increased disease risk. An excellent autoantibody
    assay for celiac disease is now also available
    (determination of transglutaminase
    autoantibodies).

34
  • More than 20 years may elapse between the onset
    on one endocrinopathy and the diagnosis of the
    next. As many as 40-50 of subjects with
    Addisons disease will develop an associated
    endocrinopathy. A distinction must be made for
    subjects with isolated thyroid disease
    (relatively frequent in the general population)
    who have no family history of polyglandular
    syndrome type II. Such individuals have a
    relatively low probability of developing
    additional autoimmune disorders in comparison
    with individuals with rare autoimmune disorders
    such as Addisons disease or myasthenia gravis.
    Rarely, hypoparathyroidism, a specific endocrine
    disturbance present in the type 1 syndrome, is
    identified in a patient with type II syndrome.
    Hypoparathyroidism in such type II polyendocrine
    autoimmune patients may result from a
    suppressive autoantibody rather than
    parathyroid destruction as in the type 1
    syndrome. In a patient with the type II syndrome,
    celiac disease is a more frequent cause of
    hypocalcemia than hypoparathyroidism.

35
  • Several autoantibodies are both disease specific
    (e.g., anti-acetylcholine receptor antibodies in
    myasthenia gravis and anti-TSH receptor
    antibodies in Graves disease) and causal.
  • Causal autoantibodies are associated with
    transplacental disease transmission. Other
    autoantibodies (e.g., antithyroid autoantibodies
    including anti-thyroid peroxidase, formerly
    termed anti-microsomal, and anti-thyroglobulin)
    are so frequent among patients and relatives as
    to be of little predictive value.
  • For example, a relative with anti-thyroid
    peroxidase autoantibodies has a low risk of
    hypothyroidism unless evidence of abnormal
    thyroid function is also present (e.g., elevated
    TSH). In a similar manner, many individuals may
    have antibodies to parietal cells, H/K
    adenosine triphosphatase of the stomach and
    intrinsic factor, but the autoantibodies do not
    correlate well with abnormal gastric acid
    secretion or development of pernicious anemia.
    Studies of the neonatal presence of such
    autoantibodies will be important to determine if
    they increase risk of later disease.

36
  • In the APS-II syndrome, many ICA (islet cell
    antibody) -positive individuals do not progress
    to diabetes, and diabetes risk is much lower than
    for ICA-positive first-degree relatives of
    patients with type 1 diabetes. These
    non-progressing ICA-positive polyendocrine
    patients usually express what has been termed
    selective or restricted ICA. Such ICA react
    only with islet B cells, not A cells within rat
    islets and fail to react with mouse islets. They
    represent unusual high titer autoantibodies
    reacting with glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD).
    This unusual form of ICA confers a lower risk of
    type 1 diabetes as compared with nonrestricted
    ICA (reacts with multiple islet molecules) for
    both polyendocrine patients and relatives of
    patients with type 1 diabetes.

37
  • Other autoantibodies associated with the type II
    syndrome include anti-melanocytic, anti-adrenal
    (in particular 21-hydroxylase) and anti-gonadal
    autoantibodies. Anti-adrenal cortical antibodies
    have been used to predict adrenal insufficiency
    in the type 1 syndrome.
  • It is noteworthy that many of the polyendocrine
    autoantibodies react with intracellular enzymes,
    including thyroid peroxidase (Hashimotos
    thyroditis), glutamic acid decarboxylase (type 1
    diabetes and stiff-man syndrome), 21 hydroxylase
    (Addisons disease), and cytochrome P450
    cholesterol side chain cleavage enzyme (Addisons
    disease). In addition, antibodies to hormones can
    be present, including anti-insulin,
    anti-thyroxine, and anti-intrinsic factor
    antibodies (pernicious anemia).
  • Antibodies to specific receptors are
    characteristic of given disorders
    (anti-acetylcholine receptor antibodies of
    myasthenia gravis, anti-TSH receptor antibodies
    of Graves disease or hypothyroidism, and oocyte
    sperm receptor autoantibodies associated with
    oophoritis). The large variety of target
    molecules, (e.g., type 1 diabetes), presence of
    high affinity IgG autoantibodies, and the
    sequential appearance over years of specific
    antibodies or disorders suggest that the
    production of most autoantibodies is secondary to
    tissue destruction and are antigen driven.

38
Pathogenesis
  • A central question is what links all the
    different disorders of the APS-II syndrome? Why
    do some individuals have a single autoimmune
    disorder while others have multiple diseases?One
    hypothesis is that different tissues share the
    same autoantigen and thus when autoimmunity is
    directed at one organ it will also affect other
    organs. This is highly unlikely given the number
    of different molecules targeted specifically for
    many autoimmune disorders and the wide
    discordance in time relative to the appearance of
    for instance specific autoantibodies and disease.
    Another hypothesis is that different organs may
    share immunologically related molecules (mimics)
    and such mimics may be as simple as short
    peptides recognized by T lymphocytes. That is
    also a possibility, but would not explain the
    wide time differences of disease appearance and
    spectrum of different illnesses. It is believed
    that the most likely link between the diverse
    diseases is genetic propensity to fail to
    maintain tolerance to multiple self molecules,
    and in particular specific self-peptides.

39
  • Environmental factors and additional genetic
    determinants (e.g. specific HLA alleles) then
    determine the timing of loss of tolerance and the
    probability that a specific organ will be
    targeted. Failure to maintain tolerance can be a
    result of deficient T regulation or enhanced T
    cell activation. An additional hypothesis is that
    HLA alleles associated with autoimmunity might be
    inherently contributing to autoreactivity. If
    this is true then specific HLA haplotypes can be
    protective for one autoimmune disorder and
    promote another.

40
  • For example DR2/DQB10602 haplotypes are high
    risk for multiple sclerosis but provide dominant
    protection for type 1A diabetes. Both
    autoreactive T cells and autoantibodies are
    pathogenic, depending on the specific disease. In
    Graves disease, anti-thyrotropin (TSH)
    autoantibodies lead to thyroid hyperfunction and
    anti-insulin receptor autoantibodies can result
    in either hypoglycemia or insulin resistance with
    hyperglycemia. Type 1A diabetes is a T cell
    mediated disorder and an interesting case report
    describes a child developing diabetes with a
    mutation eliminating B-lymphocytes and thus
    autoantibodies.T cell autoimmunity is much more
    difficult to study and correlate with a disease
    compared to autoantibodies.

41
  • Experimental animal models of organ-specific
    autoimmunity have been studied. These were
    dependent upon the injection of putative
    autoantigens into animals in the presence of
    adjuvants that enhance inflammation.
  • Thus, thyroiditis can readily be induced in
    selective strains of mice following injection of
    thyroglobulin or thyroid peroxidase in Freunds
    adjuvant. Anti-insulin autoantibodies can be
    induced in normal Balb/c mice following the
    administration of insulin peptide B9-23, and
    these autoantibodies react with intact insulin
    and are not absorbed by the immunizing peptide.
  • In Balb/c mice expressing an activating molecule
    in islets (B7.1) immunization with the B9-23
    peptide leads to diabetes. T cell clones reacting
    with these molecules, or other selected peptides,
    can be generated, and such clones when
    transferred into naive animals induce disease. Of
    note, several forms of immunization with such
    autoreactive clones can be used to make animals
    refractory to disease induction. These studies
    provide clear evidence that autoreactive T cells
    are present in normal animals and they can be
    rapidly activated, given appropriate
    stimulation.

42
XPID (X-Linked Polyendocrinopathy, Immune
Dysfunction and Diarrhea)
  • The XPID syndrome presents in neonates with fatal
    autoimmunity and this very rare disorder has
    multiple different names reflecting
    endocrinopathy, allergic manifestations,
    intestinal destruction and immune dysregulation .
  • Most children with the disorder die in infancy
    and many die in the first days of life. They
    manifest neonatal type 1 diabetes, but the cause
    of death probably relates to massive intestinal
    involvement and malabsorption.The disease
    results from mutations that inactivate the Foxp3
    transcription factor and the same gene is also
    mutated in a mouse model (the Scurfy mouse). The
    pathway this gene controls in T lymphocytes is
    now identified as central to basic immunology. In
    particular the gene controls the regulatory
    function of CD4CD25 regulatory T
    lymphocytes(137178). From this discovery it is
    now apparent why bone marrow transplantation of
    normal lymphocytes is able to cure the mouse
    disease, namely the replacement of regulatory
    lymphocytes is able to control autoimmune
    reactivity of effector lymphocytes of the Scurfy
    mouse recipient, despite their lacking the Foxp3
    gene.

43
Anti-Insulin Receptor Antibodies
  • The presence of anti-insulin receptor
    autoantibodies is characterized by marked insulin
    resistance, but paradoxically, patients can also
    have severe hypoglycemia. Approximately one third
    of the subjects have other autoimmune disorders.
    Characteristically, associated autoimmune
    diseases are non-organ specific.

44
Thymic Tumors
  • Thymomas and thymic hyperplasia are associated
    with a series of autoimmune diseases. The most
    common autoimmune diseases are myasthenia gravis
    and red cell aplasia. Graves disease, type 1
    diabetes, and Addisons disease may also be
    associated with thymic tumors. Unique
    anti-acetylcholine receptor autoantibodies may be
    present with thymoma and disease may be initiated
    by transcription of molecules within the tumor
    related to acetylcholine receptors.

45
POEMS Syndrome
  • POEMS (Plasmacytoma, endocrinopathy, monoclonal
    gammopathy, and skin changes) patients usually
    present with a sensory motor polyneuropathy,
    diabetes mellitus (50), primary gonadal failure
    (70), and a plasma cell dyscrasia with sclerotic
    bony. T
  • emporary remission may result following
    radiotherapy directed at the plasmacytoma. The
    syndrome is assumed to be secondary to
    circulating immunoglobulins but patients have
    excess vascular endothelial growth factor as well
    as elevated IL1-b, IL-6, and TNF-a.

46
Insulin Autoimmune Syndrome (Hirata Syndrome)
  • The insulin autoimmune syndrome, associated with
    Graves disease and methimazole therapy (or other
    sulfhydryl containing medications) is of
    particular interest due to a remarkably strong
    association with a specific HLA haplotype . Such
    patients with elevated titers of anti-insulin
    autoantibodies frequently present with
    hypoglycemia. The disease in Japan is essentially
    confined to DR4-positive individuals with
    DRB10406. In Hirata syndrome the anti-insulin
    autoantibodies are polyclonal. Some patients have
    monoclonal anti-insulin autoantibodies that also
    induce hypoglycemia. For these patients there is
    no HLA association with their disease.
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