Interferon‐α/β–mediated innate immune mechanisms in dermatomyositis

Steven A. Greenberg(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Jack L. Pinkus(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Geraldine S. Pinkus(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Travis Burleson(Boston Children's Hospital), Despina Sanoudou(Academy of Athens), Rabi Tawil(University of Rochester Medical Center), Richard J. Barohn(University of Kansas Medical Center), David Saperstein(University of Kansas Medical Center), Hannah Briemberg(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Maria Ericsson(Harvard University), Peter J. Park(Boston Children's Hospital), Anthony A. Amato(Brigham and Women's Hospital)
Annals of Neurology
April 25, 2005
Cited by 611

Abstract

Dermatomyositis has been modeled as an autoimmune disease largely mediated by the adaptive immune system, including a local humorally mediated response with B and T helper cell muscle infiltration, antibody and complement-mediated injury of capillaries, and perifascicular atrophy of muscle fibers caused by ischemia. To further understand the pathophysiology of dermatomyositis, we used microarrays, computational methods, immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy to study muscle specimens from 67 patients, 54 with inflammatory myopathies, 14 with dermatomyositis. In dermatomyositis, genes induced by interferon-alpha/beta were highly overexpressed, and immunohistochemistry for the interferon-alpha/beta inducible protein MxA showed dense staining of perifascicular, and, sometimes all myofibers in 8/14 patients and on capillaries in 13/14 patients. Of 36 patients with other inflammatory myopathies, 1 patient had faint MxA staining of myofibers and 3 of capillaries. Plasmacytoid dendritic cells, potent CD4+ cellular sources of interferon-alpha, are present in substantial numbers in dermatomyositis and may account for most of the cells previously identified as T helper cells. In addition to an adaptive immune response, an innate immune response characterized by plasmacytoid dendritic cell infiltration and interferon-alpha/beta inducible gene and protein expression may be an important part of the pathogenesis of dermatomyositis, as it appears to be in systemic lupus erythematosus.


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