Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0409974 (lupus)
22,386 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A clone isolated from a tick salivary gland cDNA library encodes a homologue of the human Ki lupus autoantigen, a protein of unknown function that is related to the subunits of the PA28 proteasome activator. The Ki sequences appear to be well conserved between mammals and invertebrates, with 55% identity between the tick and human primary structures. This is the first report of a Ki homologue in invertebrates.
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PMID:A tick homologue of the human Ki nuclear autoantigen. 895 Jan 68

In this report we summarize evidence to support a model for the development of Graves' disease. The model suggests that Graves' disease is initiated by an insult to the thyrocyte in an individual with a normal immune system. The insult, infectious or otherwise, causes double strand DNA or RNA to enter the cytoplasm of the cell. This causes abnormal expression of major histocompatibility (MHC) class I as a dominant feature, but also aberrant expression of MHC class II, as well as changes in genes or gene products needed for the thyrocyte to become an antigen presenting cell (APC). These include increased expression of proteasome processing proteins (LMP2), transporters of antigen peptides (TAP), invariant chain (Ii), HLA-DM, and the co-stimulatory molecule, B7, as well as STAT and NF-kappaB activation. A critical factor in these changes is the loss of normal negative regulation of MHC class I, class II, and thyrotropin receptor (TSHR) gene expression, which is necessary to maintain self-tolerance during the normal changes in gene expression involved in hormonally-increased growth and function of the cell. Self-tolerance to the TSHR is maintained in normals because there is a population of CD8- cells which normally suppresses a population of CD4+ cells that can interact with the TSHR if thyrocytes become APCs. This is a host self-defense mechanism that we hypothesize leads to autoimmune disease in persons, for example, with a specific viral infection, a genetic predisposition, or even, possibly, a TSHR polymorphism. The model is suggested to be important to explain the development of other autoimmune diseases including systemic lupus or diabetes.
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PMID:Graves' disease: a host defense mechanism gone awry. 1112 19

Lymphocyte development, selection and education represent tightly controlled immune processes that normally prevent autoimmunity. Lymphocyte development requires cellular selection through apoptosis to remove potentially autoreactive cells. Dysregulated apoptosis, both interrupted as well as accetuated apoptosis, are now demonstrated as central defects in diverse human and murine autoimmune disease. In murine models of autoimmune lupus, mutations in cell death receptor CD95 (Fas) and its ligand CD95L (FasL) have been identified; these errors create a lymphoid system resistant to apoptosis. In contract, select lymphoid subpopulations of auto immune diabetic mice have accelerated apoptosis due to faulty activation of transcription factor NF-kappaB that normally protects against apoptotic death. The genetic basis of interrupted NF-kappaB in diabetes is a gene defect in an essential subunit of the proteasome. Although no specific gene in most common forms of human autoimmune disease has been identified, functional assays repeatedly demonstrate apoptotic defects in multiple cellular signaling pathways for cell death.
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PMID:Implications of altered apoptosis in diabetes mellitus and autoimmune disease. 1132 Oct 39

Lymphocyte development, selection, and education are strictly controlled to prevent autoimmunity, with potentially autoreactive cells being removed by apoptosis. Dysregulation of apoptosis is a central defect in diverse murine autoimmune diseases. In murine models of autoimmune lupus, for example, mutations in the death receptor Fas (CD95) or in its ligand, FasL (CD95L), have been identified and shown to render lymphoid cells resistant to apoptosis. In contrast, select lymphoid subpopulations of mice with autoimmune diabetes manifest an increased susceptibility to apoptosis as a result of impaired activation of the transcription factor nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-kappaB), which normally protects cells against tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha)-induced apoptosis. The genetic basis of this defect in NF-kappaB activation is a mutation in the promoter-enhancer region of a gene that encodes an essential subunit (LMP2) of the proteasome. Although no specific genetic defects have been identified in most common forms of human autoimmune disease, functional assays consistently demonstrate heightened apoptosis attributable to multiple death signaling pathways.
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PMID:Role of defective apoptosis in type 1 diabetes and other autoimmune diseases. 1279 17

Lymphocyte development, selection and education represent tightly controlled immune processes that normally prevent autoimmunity. Lymphocyte development likely induces cellular selection through apoptosis to remove potentially autoreactive cells. Dysregulated apoptosis, both interrupted as well as accelerated apoptosis, are now demonstrated as central defects in diverse murine autoimmune disease. In murine models of autoimmune lupus, mutations in cell death receptor Fas (CD95) and its ligand, FasL (CD95 L), have been identified. These errors create a lymphoid system resistant to apoptosis. In contrast, select lymphoid subpopulations of maturing autoimmune prone non-obese diabetic mice have identifiable and pathogenic T cells with both in vivo and in vitro heightened apoptosis after drug interventions. In part, these defects are due to faulty activation of transcription factors such as nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) that normally protect against apoptotic death. The genetic basis of interrupted NF-kappaB in pathogenic memory T cells in diabetes is attributable to a developmentally controlled gene defect in an essential subunit of the proteasome. No specific gene in most common forms of human autoimmune disease has yet been identified. Functional assays from diverse laboratories repeatedly demonstrate heightened apoptosis in multiple cellular signaling pathways for cell death, suggesting a common theme in disease causality.
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PMID:Central role of defective apoptosis in autoimmunity. 1466 1

Association of SLE and alfalfa was first reported in a volunteer who developed lupus-like autoimmunity while ingesting alfalfa seed for a hypercholesterolemia study. This was corroborated with studies in monkeys fed with alfalfa sprout that developed SLE. Re-challenge with L-canavanine relapsed the disease. Arginine homologue L-canavanine, present in alfalfa, was suspected as a cause. L-canavanine can be charged by arginyl tRNA synthetase to replace L-arginine during protein synthesis. Aberrant canavanyl proteins have disrupted structure and functions. Induction or exacerbation of SLE by alfalfa tablets reported in a few cases remains controversial. Epidemiological studies on the relationship between alfalfa and SLE are sparse. In mice, NZB/W F1, NZB, and DBA/2 mice fed with L-canavanine show exacerbation/triggering of the SLE, however, BALB/c studies were negative. L-canavanine incorporation may be more efficient in the presence of inflammation or other conditions that can cause arginine deficiency. The L-canavanine induced apoptotic cells can be phagocytosed and a source of autoantigens processed by endosomal proteases. Endogenous canavanyl proteins are ubiquitinated and processed via proteasome. Incorporation of L-canavanine into proteasome or endosome can also cause disruption of antigen processing. Alfalfa/L-canavanine-induced lupus will be an interesting model of autoimmunity induced by the modification of self-proteins at the translational level.
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PMID:Role of non-protein amino acid L-canavanine in autoimmunity. 1689 Aug 99

Lupus treatment has evolved considerably with spectacular advances that can be summarized in 10 points. Hydroxychloroquine and cyclophosphamide are still standard drugs, provided their use is optimized. Contraception and postmenopausal hormone replacement therapy have finally been tested in randomized studies with fairly reassuring results, although prudence remains essential in patients with severe lupus and above all in those with thrombotic complications (antiphospholipid syndrome). Mycophenolic acid has been shown to be useful in the treatment of lupus nephropathies, but its specific place in the therapeutic strategy remains to be defined. Other drugs (sirolimus, abatacept) are currently being evaluated. Anti-lymphocyte B therapies are growing in popularity. Rituximab and other drugs (anti-BAFF, TACI-Fc) are also being evaluated and their results appear very interesting. Interferon alpha (type I) inhibition is an attractive therapeutic approach in lupus but its use in humans is still premature. Peptide vaccination with fragments of autoantibodies or autoantigens is an elegant strategy, and preliminary results justify further studies. Anti-TNF molecules may be beneficial in lupus. Complement inhibition can be useful in lupus and antiphospholipid syndrome but drugs usable in humans (anti-C5) must be developed. Atheromatosis in lupus is the principal cause of morbidity and mortality and must be managed. Smoking cessation is essential, but other approaches (statins) should also be discussed. Many futuristic types of immune manipulation may be envisioned (proteasome inhibition, modulation of Fc gammaRIIB, and modulation of cell signaling (PI3kgamma)). Hence the perspectives are numerous. We will soon be able to optimize the treatment of our patients. Nevertheless, rigorous evaluation of the risk/benefit ratio of new drugs and of their most appropriate place in the therapeutic strategy against systemic lupus is indispensable.
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PMID:[Systemic lupus erythematosus: news and therapeutic perspectives]. 1824 45

Autoantibody-mediated diseases like myasthenia gravis, autoimmune hemolytic anemia and systemic lupus erythematosus represent a therapeutic challenge. In particular, long-lived plasma cells producing autoantibodies resist current therapeutic and experimental approaches. Recently, we showed that the sensitivity of myeloma cells toward proteasome inhibitors directly correlates with their immunoglobulin synthesis rates. Therefore, we hypothesized that normal plasma cells are also hypersensitive to proteasome inhibition owing to their extremely high amount of protein biosynthesis. Here we show that the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib, which is approved for the treatment of multiple myeloma, eliminates both short- and long-lived plasma cells by activation of the terminal unfolded protein response. Treatment with bortezomib depleted plasma cells producing antibodies to double-stranded DNA, eliminated autoantibody production, ameliorated glomerulonephritis and prolonged survival of two mouse strains with lupus-like disease, NZB/W F1 and MRL/lpr mice. Hence, the elimination of autoreactive plasma cells by proteasome inhibitors might represent a new treatment strategy for antibody-mediated diseases.
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PMID:The proteasome inhibitor bortezomib depletes plasma cells and protects mice with lupus-like disease from nephritis. 1854 49

Brief virologic news included the discovery of the virophage, a unique parasite of the giant mimivirus and the association of HHV-8 infection with a peculiar form of African diabetes. Secondly, this news focused on risk factors for arterial or venous thrombosis and therapy for auto-immune disorders. Only oral estrogen therapy increases the risk of venous thromboembolism in postmenopausal women. Despite significant homocysteine lowering, vitamin supplementation with folic acid, vitamins B6 and B12 did not reduce total cardiovascular events among high-risk patients. Patients with venous thromboembolism have a substantially increased long-term risk of subsequent cardiovascular events while obesity, systemic arterial hypertension, and diabetes are common risk factors for arterial and venous thrombosis. The non fasting ApoB/ApoA1 ratio was superior to any of the cholesterol ratios for estimation of the risk of acute myocardial infection in all ethnic groups. Preventive anticoagulation of in-patients with risk of venous thromboembolism was inadequately prescribed in many hospitals of the world. Subcutaneous administration of methotrexate was more effective than the oral administration at the same dosage in patients suffering from active rheumatoid arthritis. Hydroxychloroquine directly reduces the binding of antiphospholipid antibody-beta2-glycoprotein I complexes to phospholipid bilayers. Anti-IL-5 and anti-IL-6 antibodies were effective for the treatment of respectively hypereosinophilic syndrome and rheumatoid arthritis. The efficacy of proteasome inhibitors and mesenchymal stems cells have been demonstrated in respectively two mouse strains with lupus-like disease and steroid-resistant severe acute graft-versus-host disease. These treatments may be useful for auto-immune disorders if their long term toxicity is acceptable. In conclusion, subcutaneous injections of physiological saline, used as placebo in two different trials, enhanced in vitro activation of immunocompetent cells in healthy individuals.
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PMID:[What's new in internal medicine?]. 1926 9

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a chronic inflammatory disease characterized by the dysfunction of T cells, B cells, and dendritic cells and by the production of antinuclear autoantibodies. This editorial provides a synopsis of newly discovered genetic factors and signaling pathways in lupus pathogenesis that are documented in 11 state-of-the-art reviews and original articles. Mitochondrial hyperpolarization underlies mitochondrial dysfunction, depletion of ATP, oxidative stress, abnormal activation, and death signal processing in lupus T cells. The mammalian target of rapamycin, which is a sensor of the mitochondrial transmembrane potential, has been successfully targeted for treatment of SLE with rapamycin or sirolimus in both patients and animal models. Inhibition of oxidative stress, nitric oxide production, expression of endogenous retroviral and repetitive elements such as HRES-1, the long interspersed nuclear elements 1, Trex1, interferon alpha (IFN-alpha), toll-like receptors 7 and 9 (TLR-7/9), high-mobility group B1 protein, extracellular signal-regulated kinase, DNA methyl transferase 1, histone deacetylase, spleen tyrosine kinase, proteasome function, lysosome function, endosome recycling, actin cytoskeleton formation, the nuclear factor kappa B pathway, and activation of cytotoxic T cells showed efficacy in animal models of lupus. Although B cell depletion and blockade of anti-DNA antibodies and T-B cell interaction have shown success in animal models, human studies are currently ongoing to establish the value of several target molecules for treatment of patients with lupus. Ongoing oxidative stress and inflammation lead to accelerated atherosclerosis that emerged as a significant cause of mortality in SLE.
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PMID:Pathogenic mechanisms in systemic lupus erythematosus. 2001 60


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