Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0027121 (myositis)
4,538 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases like systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is unresolved. Dysregulation of programmed cell death is discussed as a pathogenetic factor. We have previously shown that increased in vitro apoptosis of cultured peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) is nonspecific for SLE. Importantly, however, in recent experiments with SLE PBMC from patients with infections and fever in vitro apoptosis was strongly accelerated. We therefore hypothesized that regulation of apoptosis might be disturbed in activated SLE lymphocytes. Thus, we generated phytohemagglutinine (PHA)/IL-2 stimulated lymphoblasts in vitro. These lymphoblasts readily undergo apoptosis after culture in cytokine-free medium, and can be rescued by addition of gammac-chain cytokines IL-2, -4, -7, or -15. In lymphoblasts from 60 SLE patients tested in comparison to lymphoblasts from normal donors cultured in parallel, we found significant hyporesponsiveness to gammac-chain cytokines in SLE cells. Minor differences were also seen in lymphoblasts from patients with other systemic autoimmunopathies (mixed connective tissue disease, vasculitis, n=49)and in lymphoblasts from patients with other autoimmune diseases (mainly rheumatoid or reactive arthritis, myositis, n=44). In patients with high erythrocyte sedimentation rate (> 25 mm/h), TNF-alpha (> 6.5 pg/ml) or IL-12 (> 4.7 pg/ml) serum levels or detectable IFN-gamma concentrations hyporesponsiveness to gammac-chain cytokines was even more pronounced in SLE lymphoblasts, but not in lymphoblasts from the other groups. Moreover, increased apoptosis was seen in lymphoblasts from SLE patients with decreased complement (C)4 or elevated dsDNA antibody levels. In conclusion, these data suggest that in SLE patients with increased inflammatory activity and/or Th1 dominance signaling through gammac-chain cytokine receptors is deteriorated, leading to facilitated apoptosis of activated lymphocytes and enlarged onflow of apoptotic material.
...
PMID:Hyporesponsiveness to gammac-chain cytokines in activated lymphocytes from patients with systemic lupus erythematosus leads to accelerated apoptosis. 1198 12

Nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice and some human type 1 diabetes (T1D) patients manifest low to high levels of other autoimmune pathologies. Skewing their cytokine production from a Th1 (primarily IFN-gamma) to a Th2 (primarily IL-4 and IL-10) pattern is a widely proposed approach to dampen the pathogenicity of autoreactive diabetogenic T cells. However, it is important that altered cytokine balances not enhance any other autoimmune proclivities to dangerous levels. Murine CD4 T cells are characterized by a reciprocal relationship between the production of IFN-gamma and expression of the beta-chain component of its receptor (IFN-gamma RB). Thus, NOD mice constitutively expressing a CD2 promoter-driven IFN-gamma RB transgene in all T cells are Th1-deficient. Unexpectedly, NOD.IFN-gamma RB Tg mice were found to develop a lethal early paralytic syndrome induced by a CD8 T cell-dependent autoimmune-mediated myositis. Furthermore, pancreatic insulitis levels were not diminished in 9-wk-old NOD.IFN-gamma RB Tg females, and overt T1D developed in the few that survived to an older age. Autoimmune-mediated myositis is only occasionally detected in standard NOD mice. Hence, some manipulations diminishing Th1 responses can bring to the forefront what are normally secondary autoimmune pathologies in NOD mice, while also failing to dependably abrogate pancreatic beta cell destruction. This should raise a cautionary note when considering the use of protocols that induce alterations in cytokine balances as a means of blocking progression to overt T1D in at-risk humans.
...
PMID:Paralytic autoimmune myositis develops in nonobese diabetic mice made Th1 cytokine-deficient by expression of an IFN-gamma receptor beta-chain transgene. 1259 5

Idiopathic inflammatory myopathy is a chronic inflammatory muscle disease characterized by mononuclear cell infiltration in the skeletal muscle. The infiltrated inflammatory cells express various cytokines and cytotoxic molecules. Chemokines are thought to contribute to the inflammatory cell migration into the muscle. We induced experimental autoimmune myositis (EAM) in SJL/J mice by immunization with rabbit myosin and CFA. In the affected muscles of EAM mice, CX3CL1 (fractalkine) was expressed on the infiltrated mononuclear cells and endothelial cells, and its corresponding receptor, CX3CR1, was expressed on the infiltrated CD4 and CD8 T cells and macrophages. Treatment of EAM mice with anti-CX3CL1 mAb significantly reduced the histopathological myositis score, the number of necrotic muscle fibers, and infiltration of CD4 and CD8 T cells and macrophages. Furthermore, treatment with anti-CX3CL1 mAb down-regulated the mRNA expression of TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma, and perforin in the muscles. Our results suggest that CX3CL1-CX3CR1 interaction plays an important role in inflammatory cell migration into the muscle tissue of EAM mice. The results also point to the potential therapeutic usefulness of CX3CL1 inhibition and/or blockade of CX3CL1-CX3CR1 interaction in idiopathic inflammatory myopathy.
...
PMID:Inhibition of CX3CL1 (fractalkine) improves experimental autoimmune myositis in SJL/J mice. 1627 59

The JG strain is the least virulent while the CL-Brener clone is one of the most virulent Trypanosoma cruzi populations in young rats. In this study, we determined that the parasitemia peak values in CL-Brener clone-infected adult rats were 50-fold lower than in young rats and that mortality was null as compared to 45% death in young rats. Low parasitemia, milder and sustained myocarditis and myositis characterized JG infections. CL-Brener clone caused a significantly higher production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and higher expansion of CD3(+)CD4(-)CD8(-), double-negative (DN) T cells, during the acute phase in both adult and young rats. DN T cell frequencies correlated with IFN-gamma levels. These findings may explain the higher inflammation and fast acute phase resolution in CL-Brener infection. In young rats, IL-10 levels were similar in both infections. The IL-10/IFN-gamma ratio was higher in JG acute infection in accordance with the milder inflammation and parasite persistence leading to a chronic phase. In conclusion, virulence and pathogenicity depend on T. cruzi ability to induce expansion of DN T cells and production of specific cytokines.
...
PMID:Trypanosoma cruzi: populations bearing opposite virulence induce differential expansion of circulating CD3+CD4-CD8- T cells and cytokine serum levels in young and adult rats. 1739 6

Polymyositis (PM) is an acquired, systemic, connective tissue disease characterized by the proximal muscle weakness and infiltration of mononuclear cells into the affected muscles. To understand its etiology and immunopathogenesis, appropriate animal model is required. It has been demonstrated that immunization with native human skeletal C protein induces severe and reproducible experimental autoimmune myositis (EAM) in Lewis rats, and that the muscle inflammatory lesions in the EAM mimic those of human PM. In the present study, we prepared recombinant skeletal C protein fragment and succeeded in inducing as severe EAM as that by native C protein. We found ICOS expression on muscle fiber-infiltrating T cells in the EAM rats, but not in normal rats. Treatment with anti-ICOS mAb reduced incidence and severity of myositis; decreased the number of muscle-infiltrating CD11b/c+, TCR+, and CD8a+ cells; and inhibited the expression of IL-1alpha and CCL2 in the hamstring muscles of the EAM rats. However, the treatment neither inhibited serum anti-C protein IgG level, C protein-induced proliferation of lymph node (LN) cells, or LN T cells, nor production of IFN-gamma by C protein-stimulated LN cells in EAM rats. These data indicate that analysis of C protein-induced EAM provides not only insights into pathogenesis of PM, but also useful information regarding development of effective immunotherapy against the disease. ICOS-ICOS ligand interaction would be a novel therapeutic target for PM.
...
PMID:Attenuation of experimental autoimmune myositis by blocking ICOS-ICOS ligand interaction. 1778 14

Yellow fever (YF) vaccines (17D-204 and 17DD) are well tolerated and cause very low rates of severe adverse events (YEL-SAE), such as serious allergic reactions, neurotropic adverse diseases (YEL-AND), and viscerotropic diseases (YEL-AVD). Viral and host factors have been postulated to explain the basis of YEL-SAE. However, the mechanisms underlying the occurrence of YEL-SAE remain unknown. The present report provides a detailed immunological analysis of a 23-year-old female patient. The patient developed a suspected case of severe YEL-AVD with encephalitis, as well as with pancreatitis and myositis, following receipt of a 17D-204 YF vaccination. The patient exhibited a decreased level of expression of Fc-gammaR in monocytes (CD16, CD32, and CD64), along with increased levels of NK T cells (an increased CD3(+) CD16(+/-) CD56(+/-)/CD3(+) ratio), activated T cells (CD4(+) and CD8(+) cells), and B lymphocytes. Enhanced levels of plasmatic cytokines (interleukin-6 [IL-6], IL-17, IL-4, IL-5, and IL-10) as well as an exacerbated ex vivo intracytoplasmic cytokine pattern, mainly observed within NK cells (gamma interferon positive [IFN-gamma(+)], tumor necrosis factor alpha positive [TNF-alpha(+)], and IL-4 positive [IL-4(+)]), CD8(+) T cells (IL-4(+) and IL-5(+)), and B lymphocytes (TNF-alpha(+), IL-4(+), and IL-10(+)). The analysis of CD4(+) T cells revealed a complex profile that consisted of an increased frequency of IL-12(+) and IFN-gamma(+) cells and a decreased percentage of TNF-alpha(+), IL-4(+), and IL-5(+) cells. Depressed cytokine synthesis was observed in monocytes (TNF-alpha(+)) following the provision of antigenic stimuli in vitro. These results support the hypothesis that a strong adaptive response and abnormalities in the innate immune system may be involved in the establishment of YEL-AND and YEL-AVD.
...
PMID:Clinical and immunological insights on severe, adverse neurotropic and viscerotropic disease following 17D yellow fever vaccination. 1990 94

Interstitial lung disease (ILD) may be associated with systemic inflammatory disorders and autoantibody production. The development of ILD has been described in detail in patients with polymyositis and dermatomyositis. Anti-synthetase antibodies, including anti-Jo-1 antibodies (antihistidyl-tRNA syntase), are found in up to 35 % of patients with myositis, 80 % of which constitute anti-Jo-1 antibodies. The anti-Jo-1 syndrome characteristically presents with myositis, shortness of breath, fever, polyarthritis/arthralgia, mechanic's hands, dermatomyositis-like skin lesions, signs of a connective tissue disease and/or Raynaud's phenomenon. ILD is an early diagnostic sign and shows focal infiltrates and an acinar pattern in CT scan. Non-specific interstitial pneumonitis with T-lymphocytic infiltrates in lung histology (VATS) or elevated IFN-gamma-inducible chemokines are further indicators for anti-Jo-1 syndrome. Corticosteroids eventually combined with an immunosuppressant drug are often required with reported beneficial effects, although not many therapeutic studies have been performed. Here we present a review of the current literature and a case report on anti-Jo-1 syndrome.
...
PMID:[The anti-Jo-1 syndrome - a specific form of myositis with interstitial lung disease]. 2038 95

Chikungunya virus is a mosquito-borne arthrogenic alphavirus that has recently reemerged to produce the largest epidemic ever documented for this virus. Here we describe a new adult wild-type mouse model of chikungunya virus arthritis, which recapitulates the self-limiting arthritis, tenosynovitis, and myositis seen in humans. Rheumatic disease was associated with a prolific infiltrate of monocytes, macrophages, and NK cells and the production of monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (MCP-1), tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha), and gamma interferon (IFN-gamma). Infection with a virus isolate from the recent Reunion Island epidemic induced significantly more mononuclear infiltrates, proinflammatory mediators, and foot swelling than did an Asian isolate from the 1960s. Primary mouse macrophages were shown to be productively infected with chikungunya virus; however, the depletion of macrophages ameliorated rheumatic disease and prolonged the viremia. Only 1 microg of an unadjuvanted, inactivated, whole-virus vaccine derived from the Asian isolate completely protected against viremia and arthritis induced by the Reunion Island isolate, illustrating that protection is not strain specific and that low levels of immunity are sufficient to mediate protection. IFN-alpha treatment was able to prevent arthritis only if given before infection, suggesting that IFN-alpha is not a viable therapy. Prior infection with Ross River virus, a related arthrogenic alphavirus, and anti-Ross River virus antibodies protected mice against chikungunya virus disease, suggesting that individuals previously exposed to Ross River virus should be protected from chikungunya virus disease. This new mouse model of chikungunya virus disease thus provides insights into pathogenesis and a simple and convenient system to test potential new interventions.
...
PMID:Chikungunya virus arthritis in adult wild-type mice. 2051 86