Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/146400
Title: EULAR study group on ‘MHC-I-opathy' : identifying disease-overarching mechanisms across disciplines and borders
Authors: Kuiper, Jonas JW
Prinz, Jörg C.
Stratikos, Efstratios
Kuśnierczyk, Piotr
Arakawa, Akiko
Springer, Sebastian
Mintoff, Dillon
Padjen, Ivan
Shumnalieva, Russka
Vural, Seçil
Kötter, Ina
van de Sande, Marleen G
Boyvat, Ayşe
de Boer, Joke H
Bertsias, George
de Vries, Niek
Krieckaert, Charlotte LM
Leal, Inês
Valentinčič, Nataša Vidovič
Tugal-Tutkun, Ilknur
Ahanach, Hanane el Khaldi
Costantino, Félicie
Glatigny, Simon
Zimak, Danijela Mrazovac
Lötscher, Fabian
Kerstens, Floor G
Bakula, Marija
Sousa, Elsa Viera
Böhm, Peter
Bosman, Kees
Kenna, Tony J.
Powis, Simon J.
Breban, Maxime
Gul, Ahmet
Bowes, John
Lories, Rik JU
Nowatzky, Johannes
Wolbink, Gerrit Jan
McGonagle, Dennis G
Turkstra, Franktien
Keywords: Major histocompatibility complex
Histocompatibility antigens
Immunogenetics
Antigen presenting cells
Autoimmune diseases
Spondyloarthropathies
Behçet's disease
Issue Date: 2023
Publisher: BMJ Group
Citation: Kuiper, J. J., Prinz, J. C., Stratikos, E., Kuśnierczyk, P., Arakawa, A., Springer, S.,...Turkstra, F. (2023). EULAR study group on ‘MHC-I-opathy’: identifying disease-overarching mechanisms across disciplines and borders. Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, 82(7), 887-896.
Abstract: The ‘MHC-I (major histocompatibility complex class I)-opathy' concept describes a family of inflammatory conditions with overlapping clinical manifestations and a strong genetic link to the MHC-I antigen presentation pathway. Classical MHC-I-opathies such as spondyloarthritis, Behçet's disease, psoriasis and birdshot uveitis are widely recognised for their strong association with certain MHC-I alleles and gene variants of the antigen processing aminopeptidases ERAP1 and ERAP2 that implicates altered MHC-I peptide presentation to CD8+T cells in the pathogenesis. Progress in understanding the cause and treatment of these disorders is hampered by patient phenotypic heterogeneity and lack of systematic investigation of the MHC-I pathway. Here, we discuss new insights into the biology of MHC-I-opathies that strongly advocate for disease-overarching and integrated molecular and clinical investigation to decipher underlying disease mechanisms. Because this requires transformative multidisciplinary collaboration, we introduce the EULAR study group on MHC-I-opathies to unite clinical expertise in rheumatology, dermatology and ophthalmology, with fundamental and translational researchers from multiple disciplines such as immunology, genomics and proteomics, alongside patient partners. We prioritise standardisation of disease phenotypes and scientific nomenclature and propose interdisciplinary genetic and translational studies to exploit emerging therapeutic strategies to understand MHC-I-mediated disease mechanisms. These collaborative efforts are required to address outstanding questions in the etiopathogenesis of MHC-I-opathies towards improving patient treatment and prognostication.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/146400
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacM&SPat



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