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Incorporating the Molecular Mimicry of Environmental Antigens into the Causality of Autoimmune Hepatitis

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DIGESTIVE DISEASES AND SCIENCES
卷 68, 期 7, 页码 2824-2842

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10620-023-07967-5

关键词

Autoimmune; Causality; Molecular mimicry; Vaccination; Microbiome

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Molecular mimicry is suggested to be a cause of autoimmune hepatitis, with cross-reacting antibodies found in patients. This review discusses the evidence for molecular mimicry in experimental models and clinical cases, as well as the limitations and uncertainties associated with this theory. It calls for further investigations into diverse environmental antigens as potential sources of disease-relevant molecular mimics. The occurrence of immune-mediated hepatitis after vaccination suggests that vaccine-induced peptides may mimic tissue antigens relevant to the disease. The intestinal microbiome and chaperone molecules are also suggested to play a role in molecular mimicry.
Molecular mimicry between foreign and self-antigens has been implicated as a cause of autoimmune hepatitis in experimental models and cross-reacting antibodies in patients. This review describes the experimental and clinical evidence for molecular mimicry as a cause of autoimmune hepatitis, indicates the limitations and uncertainties of this premise, and encourages investigations that assess diverse environmental antigens as sources of disease-relevant molecular mimics. Pertinent articles were identified in PubMed using multiple search phrases. Several pathogens have linear or conformational epitopes that mimic the self-antigens of autoimmune hepatitis. The occurrence of an acute immune-mediated hepatitis after vaccination for severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)-associated coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has suggested that vaccine-induced peptides may mimic disease-relevant tissue antigens. The intestinal microbiome is an under-evaluated source of gut-derived antigens that could also engage in molecular mimicry. Chaperone molecules may enhance the pathogenicity of molecular mimics, and they warrant investigation. Molecular mimics of immune dominant epitopes within cytochrome P450 IID6, the autoantigen most closely associated with autoimmune hepatitis, should be sought in diverse environmental antigens and assessed for pathogenicity. Avoidance strategies, dietary adjustments, vaccine improvement, and targeted manipulation of the intestinal microbiota may emerge as therapeutic possibilities. In conclusion, molecular mimicry may be a missing causality of autoimmune hepatitis. Molecular mimics of key immune dominant epitopes of disease-specific antigens must be sought in diverse environmental antigens. The ubiquity of molecular mimicry compels rigorous assessments of peptide mimics for immunogenicity and pathogenicity in experimental models. Molecular mimicry may complement epigenetic modifications as causative mechanisms of autoimmune hepatitis.

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