A wide variety of medications can induce adverse immune events and autoimmune responses such as vasculitis. Mechanistically, small molecule drugs known as haptens bind and modify endogenous proteins, triggering such immune reactions. In this issue of the JCI, Xi and colleagues investigated the immunological mechanism of autoimmune vasculitis associated with hydralazine. Notably, hydralazine-based haptenization modified myeloperoxidase (MPO), inducing the enzyme conformational change. The hydralazine-modified MPO induced IgM antibody specific for the modified enzyme, followed by immune complex precipitation, tissue deposition, and complement activation. These findings provide a mechanism by which hydralazine induces a type III hypersensitivity reaction associated with mild to severe vasculitis. The study serves as an example for understanding haptenation and may inform the development of diagnostics for determining susceptibility to drug-induced allergic or autoimmune responses.
Laura Santambrogio
The mechanism of Hydralazine-induced vasculitis involves IgM reactivity to hydralazine-modified MPO.