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Patho-immunological mechanisms of vitiligo: the role of the innate and adaptive immunities and environmental stress factors.

Safa FarajElizabeth Helen KempDavid John Gawkrodger
Published in: Clinical and experimental immunology (2022)
Epidermal melanocyte loss in vitiligo, triggered by stresses ranging from trauma to emotional stress, chemical exposure or metabolite imbalance, to the unknown, can stimulate oxidative stress in pigment cells, which secrete damage-associated molecular patterns that then initiate innate immune responses. Antigen presentation to melanocytes leads to stimulation of autoreactive T-cell responses, with further targeting of pigment cells. Studies show a pathogenic basis for cellular stress, innate immune responses and adaptive immunity in vitiligo. Improved understanding of the aetiological mechanisms in vitiligo has already resulted in successful use of the Jak inhibitors in vitiligo. In this review, we outline the current understanding of the pathological mechanisms in vitiligo and locate loci to which therapeutic attack might be directed.
Keyphrases
  • immune response
  • induced apoptosis
  • oxidative stress
  • cell cycle arrest
  • dendritic cells
  • toll like receptor
  • dna damage
  • cell death
  • stress induced
  • case control
  • case report
  • climate change
  • wound healing