CJO - Abstract - Alopecia areata: pathogenesis and potential for therapy

Cambridge Journals Online

Cambridge Journals Online
Expert Reviews in Molecular Medicine (2006), 8 : 1-19 Cambridge University Press
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2006
doi:10.1017/S146239940601101X (About doi)
Published online by Cambridge University Press 20 Jun 2006
Expert Reviews in Molecular Medicine (2006), 8:14:1-19 Cambridge University Press
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2006
doi:10.1017/S146239940601101X

Review Article

Alopecia areata: pathogenesis and potential for therapy


Wei Lu a1, Jerry Shapiro a1, Mei Yu a1, Armin Barekatain a1, Blanche Lo a1, Andreas Finner a1 and Kevin McElwee a1c1
a1 Department of Dermatology and Skin Science, University of British Columbia, 835 West 10th Avenue, Vancouver, BC, V5Z 4E8, Canada.

Abstract

Although the complete picture for alopecia areata (AA) pathogenesis has yet to be determined, recent research has made much progress in our understanding of the disease mechanism. Numerous circumstantial evidence supports the notion that AA is fundamentally a disease mediated by inflammatory cells and may be autoimmune in nature. Recent research has shown the hair-loss phenotype is precipitated predominantly by CD8+ lymphocytes, but the disease mechanism is driven by CD4+ lymphocytes. Although genetic susceptibility is a key contributor to disease development, disease onset and phenotypic presentation are probably modified by complex environmental interplay. On the basis of our current understanding of AA disease pathogenesis, several experimental and theoretical therapeutic approaches might be possible. However, the pathogenetic disease mechanism is particularly robust and the development of a cure for AA will be a significant challenge.

(Published Online June 20 2006)


Key Words: Alopecia areata; inflammation; autoimmune disease; animal models; hair loss.

Correspondence:
c1 Department of Dermatology and Skin Science, University of British Columbia, 835 West 10th Avenue, Vancouver, BC, V5Z 4E8, Canada. Tel: +1 604 875 4747; Fax: +1 604 873 9919; E-mail: kevin@keratin.com


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