Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3345719 | Current Opinion in Immunology | 2016 | 7 Pages |
•Diverse tolerance checkpoints prevent production of IgG anti-DNA antibodies.•Genetic factors contribute to failed tolerance in SLE and may explain patient heterogeneity.•Understanding of the function of risk alleles may advance personalized medicine.
IgG anti-DNA antibodies are both diagnostic and pathogenic for systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). They contribute to tissue inflammation through direct tissue binding and to systemic inflammation through activation of Toll-like receptors by nucleic acid-containing immune complexes. IgG DNA-reactive antibodies originate when B cell tolerance mechanisms are impaired. The heterogeneous immune perturbations in SLE lead to the survival and activation of DNA-reactive B cells in various B cell subsets at distinct stages of B cell maturation and differentiation. We propose that the spectrum of B cell alterations and failed tolerance mechanisms for DNA-reactive B cells in lupus patients is best understood by studying genetic risk alleles. This implies that the B cells producing IgG anti-DNA antibodies and the failed tolerance mechanisms(s) will differ across patients. A better understanding of these differences should lead to better patient stratification, improved outcomes of clinical trials, and the identification of novel therapeutic targets.