Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:Q16637 (
SMA
)
8,107
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The concept of auto-immune hepatitis as a disease entity evolved from the descriptions of 'chronic active hepatitis' (CAH) in the 1950s. Several types of CAH are distinguished by disease-specific features. The distinctive (but not exclusive) markers for auto-immune CAH include: a negative test for HBsAg; female; Northern European ethnic background; multisystem disease expression; histological CAH with large areas of periportal piecemeal necrosis and plasmacytosis; pronounced hypergammaglobulinaemia; serum auto-antibodies the
HLA
B8-DR3 phenotype; responsiveness to corticosteroid therapy; and rarity of supervening hepatocellular carcinoma. Much weight is attached to the serological marker auto-antibodies to nuclear or smooth muscle (actin) antigens (ANA,
SMA
). However, these auto-antibodies do not have an absolute association with auto-immune CAH: the serological reactions are not yet standardized; titres decrease with remission of disease; and other auto-antibodies mark variant forms of auto-immune hepatitis. A more confident acceptance of auto-immune hepatitis as an entity requires detection of a liver-specific antigen, a valid experimental disease model in animals, and a better understanding of immune-mediated damage to liver cells.
...
PMID:Auto-immune (lupoid) hepatitis: an entity in the spectrum of chronic active liver disease. 210 17
An etiopathological link between hepatitis virus infection and autoimmune liver disease, in particular autoimmune hepatitis has been suggested. In some patients features of both viral and autoimmune disease are present. We have studied 352 patients with autoimmune liver disease and 507 patients with viral hepatitis for diagnostic characteristics as well as for evidence of an etiological connection. 38 of the 201 patients with hepatitis C (19%) and 42 of the 306 patients with hepatitis B (14%) had significant titres of autoantibodies (ANA,
SMA
or LKM). SLA autoantibodies were found exclusively in patients with autoimmune liver disease. LKM auto-antibody was found in only one of the 201 HCV patients. Evidence of past or present hepatitis B virus and past hepatitis A virus infection was most common in the hepatitis C virus patients and least common in autoimmune hepatitis. 28 of the 352 patients with autoimmune liver diseases tested positive in the second generation anti-HCV ELISA, but only five patients (two with autoimmune hepatitis, one with primary sclerosing cholangitis and two with primary biliary cirrhosis) were positive in confirmatory anti-HCV assays, and only in these could HCV-RNA be isolated. Autoimmune hepatitis patients had significantly higher transaminase, GLDH and IgG levels.
HLA
-B8, HLA-DR3 and HLA-DR4 were significantly more common in autoimmune hepatitis. Distinction between autoimmune liver disease and viral hepatitis C could be made reliably on clinical and laboratory grounds. Our data show that a link between hepatitis A, B, or C virus infection and autoimmune liver diseases is highly unlikely.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Relation between autoimmune liver diseases and viral hepatitis: clinical and serological characteristics in 859 patients. 852 56
Chronic inflammatory liver diseases can be induced by virus infections, toxic-metabolic factors and/or autoimmune mechanisms. This overview deals with the immunopathogenesis of chronic hepatitis B and C and autoimmune hepatitis (AIH). 1. Chronic hepatitis B: The immune response to HBV-antigens is responsible both for viral clearance and disease pathogenesis during HBV-infection. The humoral immune response to HBsAg contributes to the clearance of circulating virus particles, the cell mediated immune response to HBsAg, HBcAg and polymerase antigen eliminates infected cells. The class I- and class II restricted T-cell-responses to HBV is strong, polyclonal and multispecific in acute HB with successful clearance of the virus, but weak or incomplete in chronic HB with viral persistence. In addition to ineffective immune response host and viral factors as well as abnormalities in virus-host interactions may be the main reasons for the maintenance of HBV-carrier status. 2. Chronic hepatitis C develop in more than 60% of infected patients. There is increasing evidence that the immune response to HCV-epitopes plays an important role in the course and the pathogenesis of the disease. It has been shown that CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells recognize viral peptides in the presence of class I and II molecules. The fine specificity and functional significance of liver infiltrating and peripheral blood T-cells demonstrate HCV specific immunodominant epitopes targeted by class Ii restricted CD4+ cells in patients with chronic HCV infection. The T-cell response correlates with disease activity. The cytokine release of T-cells resemble a TH1-like profile. Studies of the humoral immune response to HCV show a correlation between IgM-anti-HCV and disease activity. In vitro and in vivo anti-HCV secretion by PBMC is due to persistent antigenic stimulation of B-cells by ongoing production of viral antigens and reflects HCV replication in PBMC. Of special interest are several immune mediated disease and immune abnormalities in chronic hepatitis C. 3. Autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) is a distinct group of acute and chronic necro-inflammatory disorders of unknown etiology characterized by immunological and autoimmunological features including the presence of autoantibodies but without an antecedent of viral infections. Marker autoantibodies define 3 subtypes: Type I (ANA/
SMA
), Type II (LKM1-AB), Type II (SLA-AB). AIH is associated with a distinct genetic background (
HLA
A1, B8, DR3 or DR4). Several studies clearly demonstrate that liver cell damage in AIH is mediated by autoimmune reactions against normal constituents of hepatocytes. Although the precise mechanisms are not yet fully understood, there is now considerable evidence that autoantigens of the hepatocellular membrane in particular the ASGPR are important targets of liver damaging autoreactions in AIH. Cellular and humoral immune reactions against the human ASGPR correlate with disease activity and usually disappear under immunosuppressive therapy.
...
PMID:[Immunopathology of chronic liver diseases]. 860 Jun 84
We present 10 Italian patients with type 2b autoimmune hepatitis (anti-LKMI positivity) and HCV infection. 6 patients had IgG concentrations above the upper limit of normal and all had histological features of chronic autoimmune hepatitis or chronic persistent hepatitis or cirrhosis. ANA and
SMA
were positive in 2 patients, pANCA in 3 patients. Anti-GOR were negative in all patients, 6 of them were
HLA
B8 DR3 and 2
HLA
B8 DR4. Antibodies to HCV (tested by ELISA 2nd and 3rd generation) were positive in all patients and in 9 subjects were detected HCV RNA. The two patients with positivity for ANA and
SMA
were treated successfully with corticosteroids, but they relapsed after the drug withdrawal; the others received interferon, that had to be suspended in 2 patients because inducing an autoimmune thyroiditis. Although, at present, it is still not known if HCV is a really trigger factor in developing autoimmunity or if the two diseases are coincidental, the authors suggest that it is important for clinicians to use appropriate treatment strategies on the basis of the predominant illness.
...
PMID:Type 2 autoimmune hepatitis and hepatitis C viraemia. 876 75
To determine the clinical, biochemical, and histological features, and outcome of childhood autoimmune hepatitis (AIH), we reviewed the medical records of 52 children with AIH, 32 (median age: 10 [2-15] years) anti-nuclear and/or smooth muscle antibody (ANA/
SMA
) positive, 20 (7 [0.8-14] years) liver/kidney microsomal antibody (LKM-1) positive, with median follow-up of 5 years (range 0.3-19). At presentation: 56% had symptoms of prolonged acute hepatitis; LKM-1 positive were younger (P = .011), with higher bilirubin (P = .007), and AST (P = .047); ANA/
SMA
positive had lower albumin (P = .023); 69% ANA/
SMA
positive, and 38% LKM-1 positive were cirrhotic (P = .080). ANA/
SMA
positive had increased frequency of
HLA
haplotype A1/B8/DR3/DR52a compared with controls (53% vs. 14%, P < .001). Of six (5 LKM-1 positive) with fulminant hepatitis, four were transplanted, one died, and one ANA/
SMA
positive improved with immunosuppression. Of 47 treated with immunosuppression, 2 (1 LKM-1 positive) died with no remission and 4 (2 LKM-1 positive) were transplanted 8 to 14 years after diagnosis. Immunosuppression was stopped successfully in 19% of ANA/
SMA
positive after a median of 3 years of treatment, but in none of LKM-1 positive. Baseline bilirubin and international normalized prothrombin ratio (INR) were independent variables predictive of outcome. In conclusion, ANA/
SMA
positive and LKM-1 positive AIH in childhood have clinical, biochemical, and histological differences, but similar severity and long-term outcome.
...
PMID:Autoimmune hepatitis in childhood: a 20-year experience. 904 95
We examined 33 successive pulmonary biopsy specimens from nine patients who underwent pulmonary transplantation; they were compared to "normal" lung tissue selected from routine transbronchial biopsy material and also to surgical biopsy specimens from a previously reported study. We used as controls the three successive biopsy specimens from Patient 7, in whom rejection reaction did not develop, and the two specimens from Patient 6, who had pneumonia caused by cytomegalovirus. The material was embedded in paraffin, and the sections were stained by hematoxylin and eosin, periodic acid-Schiff, Masson's trichrome, and Gomori's silver stains. They were also immunostained for alpha-smooth muscle actin (alpha-SMA), desmin, transforming growth factor beta1, tumor necrosis factor alpha, keratin, CD3, CD20, CD68, and
HLA
-dr. In all of the lung tissue from patients in whom a rejection reaction developed, alveolar myofibroblasts (MFs) expressed alpha-
SMA
. Sometimes, alpha-
SMA
expression appeared before the classical manifestations of rejection reaction. MFs labeled by alpha-
SMA
antibody did not express desmin; alveolar septa containing alpha-
SMA
-positive cells were frequently lined by transforming growth factor beta1 and, occasionally, tumor necrosis factor alpha-laden Type II pneumocytes. In lung tissue (from successive biopsies) that did not show evidence of rejection reaction, alveolar MFs did not express alpha-
SMA
. Our findings demonstrate that modulation of alveolar MFs is one of the manifestations of rejection in transplanted lungs; furthermore, they suggest that alpha-
SMA
staining might be useful in predicting rejection reaction before the classical cellular events occur.
...
PMID:Phenotypic modulation of alveolar myofibroblasts in transplanted human lungs. 938 65
To investigate whether sclerosing cholangitis with an autoimmune serology characteristic of autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) and AIH are distinct entities, we studied 55 consecutive children with clinical and/or biochemical evidence of liver disease and circulating antinuclear (ANA), anti-smooth muscle (
SMA
), and/or liver-kidney-microsomal type 1 (LKM1) autoantibodies. They underwent liver biopsy, direct cholangiography, sigmoidoscopy, and rectal biopsy at presentation. Twenty-eight were diagnosed as AIH in the absence and 27 autoimmune sclerosing cholangitis (ASC) in the presence of radiological features of cholangiopathy. Twenty-six ASC and 20 AIH had ANA and/or
SMA
; 1 ASC and 8 AIH LKM1 autoantibody. Similarities between the 2 conditions included most clinical and biochemical parameters and a lower frequency of
HLA
DR4. Inflammatory bowel disease and histological biliary changes were more common in ASC; coagulopathy, hypoalbuminemia, lymphocytic periportal hepatitis, and
HLA
DR3 were more common in AIH. Histological biliary changes were observed in 65% of ASC and 31% of AIH patients. Eighty-nine percent responded to immunosuppression. Follow-up liver biopsies from 17 ASC and 18 AIH patients had similarly reduced inflammatory activity and no progression to cirrhosis. Sixteen follow-up cholangiograms from AIH patients and 9 from ASC patients were unchanged, while 8 ASC patients showed a progressive cholangiopathy. One child with AIH and ulcerative colitis developed sclerosing cholangitis 8 years after presentation. At 2 to 16 years (median, 7 years) from presentation, all patients are alive, including 4 ASC patients who underwent liver transplantation. In conclusion, ASC and AIH are similarly prevalent in childhood; cholangiography is often needed to distinguish between these 2 entities, which are likely to lie within the same disease process.
...
PMID:Autoimmune hepatitis/sclerosing cholangitis overlap syndrome in childhood: a 16-year prospective study. 1123 Jul 33
Autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) is characterised histologically by interface hepatitis, and serologically by the presence of non-organ and liver specific autoantibodies and increased levels of immunoglobulin G. Its onset is often ill-defined, frequently mimicing acute hepatitis. AIH usually responds to immunosuppressive treatment, which should be instituted as soon as diagnosis is made. Two types of AIH are recognized according to seropositivity for smooth muscle and/or antinuclear antibody (
SMA
/ANA, type 1 AIH) or liver kidney microsomal type 1 antibody (LKM1, type 2 AIH). There is a female predominance in both. LKM1 positive patients tend to present more acutely, at a younger age and commonly have immunoglobulin A deficiency, while duration of symptoms before diagnosis, clinical signs, family history of autoimmunity, presence of associated autoimmune disorders, response to treatment and long-term prognosis are similar in the 2 groups. Susceptibility to AIH type 1 is conferred by possession of
HLA
DR3 and DR4, while to AIH type 2 by possession of
HLA
DR7. Liver damage is likely to derive from an immune reaction to liver cell antigens, possibly triggered by a mechanism of molecular mimicry, where immune responses to external pathogens, e.g. viruses, become directed towards structurally similar self-components. In AIH this process would be perpetuated by impairment in immune regulation.
...
PMID:Autoimmune hepatitis. 1572 81
The purpose of this study was to observe whether human peripheral dervied monouncleas cells (hMNCs) could participate in the regeneration process of the ischemic hearts in the way of differentiating into cardiomyocytes, vascular endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells. hMNCs were transplanted into the bodies of the mice with myocardial infarction through the tail vein injection. Hearts were harvested 2-12 weeks after injection then sliced up into frozen sections of 5 micron thickness. Double immunofluorescence staining was used to test the differentiation of the grafted cells into cardiomyocytes, smooth muscle cells and vascular endothelial cells which revealed that cells expressing both
HLA
and TNT,
HLA
and alpha-
SMA
,
HLA
and vWF existed in the hearts of the mice. According to the study, it is probable that hMNCs could participate in the regeneration process of the infarcted hearts in the way of differentiation.
...
PMID:[In vivo study on the potential differention capabilities of human peripheral blood-derived mononuclear cells transplanted into the nude mice with myocardial infarction]. 1861 Jun 35