Human leukocyte antigen class I in polymyositis: Leukocyte infiltrates, regeneration, and impulse block

1997 
In polymyositis (PM), T-cell mediated myocytotoxicity is directed against strongly human leukocyte antigen class I positive (HLA-I + ) muscle fibers. Fiber regeneration probably is partly responsible for this HLA-I up-regulation. We have evaluated regeneration, denervation/impulse blockade, and focal leukocyte infiltrates as possible HLA-I inducing factors in PM. Distinctive patterns of HLA-I, nerve cell adhesion molecule (NCAM), and vimentin expression accompany denervation and regeneration. Regenerating fibers also have centralized nuclei. Using semiquantitative methods, we examined strongly HLA-I + fibers in PM muscle biopsies for these markers. Sarcoplasmic HLA-I levels were related to the presence of leukocyte infiltrates and invasion of fibers. Strongly HLA-I + fibers were frequently invaded, and regeneration-associated changes were usually observed at sites of fiber damage. Sarcoplasmic HLA-I levels were stable along intact fibers, also adjacent to leukocyte infiltrates. A majority of the strongly HLA-I + fibers were nonregenerating (NCAM + only). Though other mechanisms cannot be excluded, this suggests that impulse blockade or denervation may contribute to extra HLA-I up-regulation in these fibers.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    34
    References
    4
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []