Microorganisms and autoimmunity: making the barren field fertile?
- 1 November 2003
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Reviews Microbiology
- Vol. 1 (2), 151-157
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nrmicro754
Abstract
Microorganisms induce strong immune responses, most of which are specific for their encoded antigens. However, microbial infections can also trigger responses against self antigens (autoimmunity), and it has been proposed that this phenomenon could underlie several chronic human diseases, such as type 1 diabetes and multiple sclerosis. Nevertheless, despite intensive efforts, it has proven difficult to identify any single microorganism as the cause of a human autoimmune disease, indicating that the 'one organism–one disease' paradigm that is central to Koch's postulates might not invariably apply to microbially induced autoimmune disease. Here, we review the mechanisms by which microorganisms might induce autoimmunity, and we outline a hypothesis that we call the fertile-field hypothesis to explain how a single autoimmune disease could be induced and exacerbated by many different microbial infections.Keywords
This publication has 71 references indexed in Scilit:
- "Bystander" recruitment of systemic memory T cells delays the immune response to respiratory virus infectionEuropean Journal of Immunology, 2003
- Epitope-specific Evolution of Human CD8+ T Cell Responses from Primary to Persistent Phases of Epstein-Barr Virus InfectionThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2002
- Herpes Simplex Virus-Induced Keratitis: Evaluation of the Role of Molecular Mimicry in Lesion PathogenesisJournal of Virology, 2001
- Molecular Mimicry by Herpes Simplex Virus-Type 1: Autoimmune Disease After Viral InfectionScience, 1998
- Induction of Bystander T Cell Proliferation by Viruses and Type I Interferon in VivoScience, 1996
- Focal expression of interleukin-2 does not break unresponsiveness to "self" (viral) antigen expressed in beta cells but enhances development of autoimmune disease (diabetes) after initiation of an anti-self immune response.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1995
- Sensitization to self (virus) antigen by in situ expression of murine interferon-gamma.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1995
- Cellular immunity to a determinant common to glutamate decarboxylase and coxsackie virus in insulin-dependent diabetes.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1994
- Virus infection triggers insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in a transgenic model: Role of anti-self (virus) immune responseCell, 1991
- Ablation of “tolerance” and induction of diabetes by virus infection in viral antigen transgenic miceCell, 1991