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Non-infectious environmental antigens as a trigger for the initiation of an autoimmune skin disease. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Pemphigus is a group of autoimmune skin disorders where the body produces antibodies against its own skin cells, leading to blistering.
  • The endemic form known as pemphigus foliaceus, or fogo selvagem (FS), appears to be linked to insect bites, particularly from hematophagous insects.
  • Research shows that patients with FS have specific autoantibodies that react with salivary proteins from sand flies, indicating a connection between environmental factors and the onset of this autoimmune disorder.

Article Abstract

Pemphigus represents a group of organ specific autoimmune blistering disorders of the skin mediated by pathogenic autoantibodies with well-defined antigenic targets. While most of these diseases are sporadic, endemic forms of disease do exist. The endemic form of pemphigus foliaceus (also known as fogo selvagem, FS) exhibits epidemiological features that suggest exposure to hematophagous insect bites are a possible precipitating factor of this autoimmune disease, and provides a unique opportunity to study how environmental factors contribute to autoimmune disease development. FS patients and healthy individuals from endemic regions show an autoreactive IgM response that starts in early childhood and becomes restricted to IgG4 autoantibodies in FS patients. In searching for triggering environmental antigens, we have found that IgG4 and IgE autoantibodies from FS patients cross-react with a salivary antigen from sand flies. The presence of these cross-reactive antibodies and antibody genetic analysis confirming that these antibodies evolve from the same naïve B cells provides compelling evidence that this non-infectious environmental antigen could be the initial target of the autoantibody response in FS. Consequently, FS serves as an ideal model to study the impact of environmental antigens in the development of autoimmune disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4982806PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.autrev.2016.07.005DOI Listing

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