@Jonathan Edwards
An idea about a possible mechanism of viral triggering of autoimmunity occurred to me today (one that does not involve molecular mimicry!); can I just run this by you, to see what you think.
When you get a viral infection of cells, this results in lysis of the cell, as the replicated viral particles within the cell burst out. Along with lysis, you get the lysate — the cellular debris that spills out of the ruptured cell. This lysate I presume will contain individual cellular fragments floating off into the bloodstream and lymph fluid.
My thought was that these free-floating cellular fragments might more easily elicit an antibody response against them (being mistaken for pathogens in the blood), giving rise to autoimmunity.
As a way of testing this idea: if it were true that viral cellular lysis could trigger autoimmunity, then you might expect the autoantibodies generated from a given viral infection would only be those that target
antigens found on or within the cells that given virus can infect and rupture (every virus only has a small range of cell types it can infect).
So for each autoimmune disease suspected of being triggered by certain viruses, or associated with certain viruses, one could check to see if the autoantigens in that autoimmune disease were found in or on the cell types which the associated virus infects.
In the case of ME/CFS, this check actually comes out a positive: we know from Dr Chia's work that in the chronic enterovirus stomach infections found in many ME/CFS patients, it is the parietal cells of the stomach that the enterovirus infects. Now parietal cells possess both cholinergic and adrenergic receptors on their plasma membrane (ref:
1). So that works out, according to the theory, in terms of explaining why cholinergic and adrenergic receptor autoantibodies are found in ME/CFS.
In other words, when these parietal cells are ruptured by enterovirus infection and some cholinergic and adrenergic receptor cellular fragments may float away into the bloodstream, an autoantibody response to these receptors is created.