Anti-cytokine autoantibodies: epiphenomenon or critical modulators of cytokine action

PH van der Meide, H Schellekens - … in Cytokines: The concerted action on …, 1997 - Springer
PH van der Meide, H Schellekens
Antibodies in Cytokines: The concerted action on the antigenicity of rDNA …, 1997Springer
Low amounts of high-affinity autoantibodies to various cytokines have been detected in sera
from healthy donors. Their levels, although highly variable, are increased in the circulation of
patients subjected to cytokine therapy or suffering from a variety of immunoinflammatory
diseases. It has been suggested that these autoantibodies play a regulatory role in the
intensity and duration of an immune response. The antibodies may prevent the binding of a
cytokine to its specific cell surface receptor thereby neutralizing its biological activity in vivo …
Abstract
Low amounts of high-affinity autoantibodies to various cytokines have been detected in sera from healthy donors. Their levels, although highly variable, are increased in the circulation of patients subjected to cytokine therapy or suffering from a variety of immunoinflammatory diseases. It has been suggested that these autoantibodies play a regulatory role in the intensity and duration of an immune response. The antibodies may prevent the binding of a cytokine to its specific cell surface receptor thereby neutralizing its biological activity in vivo. They may also act as carrier proteins preventing the rapid elimination of a cytokine from the circulation and thus increase its bioactivity. Additionally or alternatively, autoantibodies may modulate cytokine-induced intracellular signal transduction pathways or trigger complement-mediated cytotoxicity towards cells carrying membrane-bound cytokines. The autoantibodies may exert their regulatory role in compliance with other factors that control cytokine activity, including soluble cytokine receptors, cell surface decoy receptors, and receptor antagonists. Although not favored by many investigators, a less sophisticated role for naturally occurring anti-cytokine autoantibodies should be considered as well. Recent evidence has shown that autoantibodies are generated at a high frequency as part of a response to foreign antigens. These antibodies are produced by B cells arising from the process of somatic mutation. Thus anti-cytokine autoantibodies may be the result of a “leaky” B cell response triggered by immunoinflammatory processes.
High-titered autoantibodies induced by cytokine therapy are of clinical concern since their occurrence is often associated with the loss of response to treatment. Moreover, they may also neutralize endogenously produced cytokines with possible pathological consequences.
In this paper we have reviewed the available information on the biological and clinical significance of both naturally occurring and therapeutically induced anti-cytokine autoantibodies in animals and man with the emphasis on antibodies directed to interferons.
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