Pathogenesis of antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibody–associated small-vessel vasculitis

JC Jennette, RJ Falk, P Hu… - Annual Review of …, 2013 - annualreviews.org
JC Jennette, RJ Falk, P Hu, H Xiao
Annual Review of Pathology: Mechanisms of Disease, 2013annualreviews.org
Clinical, in vitro, and experimental animal observations indicate that antineutrophil
cytoplasmic autoantibodies (ANCA) are pathogenic. The genesis of the ANCA autoimmune
response is a multifactorial process that includes genetic predisposition, environmental
adjuvant factors, an initiating antigen, and failure of T cell regulation. ANCA activate primed
neutrophils (and monocytes) by binding to certain antigens expressed on the surface of
neutrophils in specific inflammatory microenvironments. ANCA-activated neutrophils activate …
Clinical, in vitro, and experimental animal observations indicate that antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies (ANCA) are pathogenic. The genesis of the ANCA autoimmune response is a multifactorial process that includes genetic predisposition, environmental adjuvant factors, an initiating antigen, and failure of T cell regulation. ANCA activate primed neutrophils (and monocytes) by binding to certain antigens expressed on the surface of neutrophils in specific inflammatory microenvironments. ANCA-activated neutrophils activate the alternative complement pathway, establishing an inflammatory amplification loop. The acute injury elicits an innate inflammatory response that recruits monocytes and T lymphocytes, which replace the neutrophils that have undergone karyorrhexis during acute inflammation. Extravascular granulomatous inflammation may be initiated by ANCA-induced activation of extravascular neutrophils, causing tissue necrosis and fibrin formation, which would elicit an influx of monocytes that transform into macrophages and multinucleated giant cells. Over time, the neutrophil-rich acute necrotizing lesions cause the accumulation of more lymphocytes, monocytes, and macrophages and produce typical granulomatous inflammation.
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