Drug-induced hypersensitivity reactions are instructive examples of immune reactions against low molecular weight compounds.
Classically, such reactions have been explained by the hapten concept, according to which the small antigen covalently modifies
an endogenous protein; recent studies show strong associations of several HLA molecules with hypersensitivity. In recent years,
however, evidence has become stronger that not all drugs need to bind covalently to the major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-peptide
complex in order to trigger an immune response. Rather, some drugs may bind reversibly to the MHC or possibly to the T-cell
receptor (TCR), eliciting immune reactions akin to the pharmacological activation of other receptors. While the exact mechanism
is still a matter of debate, noncovalent drug presentation clearly leads to the activation of drug-specific T cells. In some
patients with hypersensitivity, such a response may occur within hours of even the first exposure to the drug. Thus, the reaction
to the drug may not be the result of a classical, primary response but rather be mediated by existing, preactivated T cells
that display cross-reactivity for the drug and have additional (peptide) specificity as well. In this way, certain drugs may
circumvent the checkpoints for immune activation imposed by the classical antigen processing and presentation mechanisms,
which may help to explain the idiosyncratic nature of many drug hypersensitivity reactions.
Keywords cross-reactivity - drug hypersensitivity - hapten - prohapten - p-1 concept - T-cell receptor - T cells
Published: March 17, 2006