The origin of autoimmune diseases: is there a role for ancestral HLA-II haplotypes in immune hyperactivity (Ruiz-Pablos, 2025)

Manuel

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The origin of autoimmune diseases: is there a role for ancestral HLA-II haplotypes in immune hyperactivity

Ruiz-Pablos, Manuel; Paiva, Bruno; Zabaleta, Aintzane

Abstract
The prevalence of autoimmune diseases in contemporary human populations poses a challenge for both medicine and evolutionary biology. This review explores how the ancestral human leukocyte antigen class II (HLA-II) haplotypes DR2-DQ6, DR4-DQ8 and DR3-DQ2 could play a central role in susceptibility to these diseases. We propose that these haplotypes, selected in historical contexts of high infectious pressure, may have been maintained because of their ability to elicit strong T-cell responses against pathogens; however, that antigenic promiscuity may be associated with an increased tendency toward immune hyperreactivity in modern environments. This hyperreactivity, involving proinflammatory cytokines including interferon-gamma (IFN-γ), could contribute to the breakdown of tolerance and the emergence of autoimmunity and related clinical phenomena (e.g., Long COVID, myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome and post-vaccination syndromes), although the evidence for the latter remains limited. Finally, we discuss how chronic infections, immunotherapies, vaccination, obesity and chronic physical stressors may exacerbate this susceptibility and consider the therapeutic implications of integrating HLA-II profiling into clinical practice.

Web | DOI | Frontiers in Immunology | Open Access
 
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New article we have published:
“The Genes of the Survivors: How Immunological Inheritance Drives Autoimmune Diseases, Long COVID and ME/CFS”

Certain ancestral HLA-II haplotypes (DR2–DQ6, DR3–DQ2, DR4–DQ8) provided advantage during epidemics because they produce strong and rapid immune responses; today, in the presence of persistent infections or chronic immune stimuli, that same “power” can become a Achilles’ heel and facilitate the emergence of autoimmunity and post-infectious or post-vaccinal syndromes in susceptible individuals.

1) What is the main idea?
Imagine your immune system has a genetic “accelerator”: certain HLA-II haplotypes present a greater variety of peptides and generate very intense CD4⁺ T-cell responses (more IFN-γ, more activation). This was advantageous during epidemics: those who carried this “accelerator” had a higher probability of surviving and reproducing, so those alleles increased in the population. But today, with latent infections (e.g., EBV/CMV, etc.), modern exposures and persistent stimuli, that accelerator can keep the system switched on and, over time, break self-tolerance → autoimmunity.


2) Mechanism summarized
  • “Promiscuous” HLA-II = presents many peptides (pathogens and, by chance, some self or modified peptide).
  • Strong early response = high IFN-γ production and T-cell activation → good control of acute infections.
  • If the pathogen persists (evades, becomes latent, or hides intracellularly), stimulation continues: chronic inflammation, appearance of autoreactive lymphocytes, epitope spreading, and autoantibodies.
  • Result: processes like multiple sclerosis, RA, celiac disease, type 1 diabetes, ME/CFS or Long-COVID, etc., can emerge on that genetic terrain + environmental trigger (infection).


3) Detailed mechanism: How does autoimmunity develop?
  • Some “ancestral” HLA-II haplotypes (DR2–DQ6, DR3–DQ2, DR4–DQ8) present many types of peptides. That makes the immune system react fast and very strongly against infections — an advantage in ancient pandemics.
  • If the infection resolves quickly, all good. But if a pathogen persists (latency, intracellular infection) or if there is continuous immune stimulus (obesity, chronic allergies, certain treatments or in rare cases specific vaccines/adjuvants), the response remains switched on.
  • This chronic stimulation makes cells that normally don’t present antigens begin to show peptides via HLA-II (by the action of IFN-γ and JAK–STAT → CIITA). Thus “self-peptides” become visible to CD4⁺ T lymphocytes.
  • Some autoreactive T and B cells, which exist by chance in all of us, receive help, proliferate and produce autoantibodies. Epitope spreading occurs and almost a local immune micro-system (ectopic lymphoid aggregates) forms, perpetuating damage. Result: autoimmune disease.

Highlight:
a genetic “accelerator” that once saved lives may, with modern chronic stimuli, become the Achilles’ heel that leads to autoimmunity in susceptible people.


4) Evidence and concrete examples
  • HLA ↔ autoimmunity associations: DR2–DQ6, DR3–DQ2, DR4–DQ8 repeatedly appear as risk factors in 90% of autoimmune diseases (T1D, MS, RA, celiac disease).
  • EBV and multiple sclerosis: strong epidemiological and mechanistic signals link EBV infection with MS risk; EBV may reactivate and maintain chronic antigenic stimulus. This fits the antigen persistence hypothesis. Same occurs in lupus erythematosus after EBV infection.
  • Pandemrix and narcolepsy: a clear example of genetic interaction + vaccine stimulus: DQB1*06:02 (part of DR2–DQ6) showed greatly increased risk of narcolepsy after the Pandemrix vaccine in 2009–2010. It illustrates how a massive immune stimulus may trigger a syndrome in genetic subgroups.
  • Long-COVID or ME/CFS and autoantibodies / immune dysfunction: reviews find evidence (autoantibodies, B-cell dysregulation, viral reactivation) that may explain post-SARS-CoV-2 or post-other pathogen symptoms; in individuals with predisposing haplotypes, the potent initial response + antigen persistence match this hypothesis.

5) Why didn’t natural selection “eliminate” these genes?
Because natural selection favors reaching reproductive age, not longevity. If a haplotype enabled survival during epidemics in reproductive age —even if it causes autoimmunity later— that haplotype spreads. In pandemics, immediate survival outweighs the cost of late disease.


6) Practical implications
  • For researchers: this suggests studying HLA × infectious persistence interactions (EBV, CMV, other intracellular pathogens), measuring cytokine profiles and autoantibodies longitudinally, and using HLA-transgenic models.
  • For clinicians: recognize that genetic subgroups may have increased risk of autoimmune reactions after certain high-stimulation triggers (oncological treatments, new adjuvants, or mass vaccination campaigns); HLA-typing could become a future risk-stratification tool.
  • For the public: this does not invalidate the usefulness of most vaccines. The correct interpretation is: by understanding risk in subgroups with these HLA-II haplotypes, we can improve safety and design.


7) Conclusion
Integrative hypothesis: ancestral HLA-II haplotypes offer strong initial response → survival; their antigenic promiscuity and persistence of certain pathogens promote chronic inflammation → autoimmunity in susceptible individuals.




Detailed explanation for readers with technical interest
1) Starting point: genetic predisposition
• Ancestral haplotypes: DR2–DQ6 (DRB1*15:01–DQB1*06:02), DR3–DQ2 (DRB1*03:01–DQB1*02:01), DR4–DQ8 (DRB1*04:01–DQB1*03:02). Their repeated association with multiple autoimmune diseases and more intense inflammatory profiles is documented.

2) Antigenic promiscuity — the molecular key
• These HLA-II have binding sites that tolerate and present a broad repertoire of peptides (pathogens and, by chance, self or modified peptides — e.g., citrullinated, deamidated). This promiscuity increases the probability that self-epitopes escaping central deletion are presented.

3) Initial stimulus & cytokine profile
• After infection (or vaccine stimulus/ICIs/obesity/allergy), carriers of these haplotypes tend to generate strong Th1 responses with high IFN-γ (and TNFα, IL-21, etc.). This phase explains the evolutionary advantage: rapid control of lethal pathogens.

4) IFN-γ → JAK-STAT1 → CIITA → ectopic HLA-II
• IFN-γ activates the JAK–STAT1 pathway and induces CIITA, the master factor that increases HLA-II genes. As a result, non-professional cells (epithelial, endothelial, myocytes, tissue cells) begin to express HLA-II and present local peptides. This exposes “hidden” self-peptides to the immune system.

5) Activation of autoreactive CD4⁺ and help to B
• Ectopic HLA-II + costimulators (B7/CD28, CD40/CD40L) allow autoreactive CD4⁺ clones —that may have survived selection— to activate, proliferate and provide B-cell help. B cells differentiate into plasma cells producing autoantibodies.

6) Epitope spreading and perpetuation
• The initial response may expand: tissue damage generates neoantigens (PTMs, truncated proteins) and epitope spreading activates (response targets new self determinants). Ectopic lymphoid aggregates form — local “small lymph nodes” perpetuating autoimmunity.

7) Contributing mechanisms
Molecular mimicry: some viral/protein sequences resemble self → cross-reactivity.
Bystander activation: cytokines and tissue stress activate nearby lymphocytes without direct antigen recognition.
Antigen persistence: pathogens such as EBV/CMV or intracellular infections that aren’t eliminated maintain continuous stimulation. In some haplotypes (e.g., DRB1*15:01) presentation of certain viral epitopes may be suboptimal, facilitating persistence.


8) Clinical result: spectrum of diseases
• Depending on the tissue, peptide presented and context, the process may manifest as MS, RA, lupus, celiac disease, T1D, SLE, ME/CFS, Long-COVID, post-vaccinal syndromes and other autoimmune diseases. Tables in the article show that associations with DR2/DR3/DR4 are present in most prevalent autoimmune diseases.


9) Why obesity, allergies, ICIs and other situations increase risk when coinciding with these alleles?

  • Obesity: state of chronic inflammation (metainflammation): TLR4 via LPS, NF-κB, overproduction of TNF/IL-6/IFN-γ, increased intestinal permeability → more systemic stimulus favouring ectopic HLA-II and autoreactive activation; in individuals with pro-inflammatory haplotypes, this amplifies the circuit leading to autoimmunity.
  • Chronic allergies: sustained exposure to allergens generates a persistent inflammatory microenvironment; in carriers of these haplotypes the response may shift to a pathogenic Th1 profile (more IFN-γ) and increase the probability of tolerance break.
  • Immunotherapies (ICIs): by “removing brakes” (anti-PD-1, anti-CTLA-4), T-cell activation is enhanced; in individuals with HLA predisposing strong responses this facilitates viral reactivation, ectopic presentation and autoimmunity (explaining greater irAEC incidence in certain genotypes).
  • Potent vaccines/adjuvants: in rare cases (e.g., Pandemrix®) the combination of adjuvant+antigen+genetics may precipitate syndromes in subgroups; authors note stronger evidence for DR2-DQB1*06:02 in post-Pandemrix narcolepsy, and that duration/intensity of stimulus matters.


10) Two autoimmune pathogenic pathways that complement each other in Long COVID, ME/CFS and post-vaccinal syndromes.
Both mechanisms may coexist and reinforce each other, producing a sustained pro-inflammatory circuit.

A. Autoimmunity against the HPA axis → relative hypocortisolism
  • The HPA axis regulates cortisol production, our main endogenous anti-inflammatory mechanism.
  • If the pituitary or HPA axis suffers direct damage, neuroinflammation or autoimmunity (e.g., post-infectious hypophysitis), central or functional hypocortisolism may arise.
  • Consequences: reduced ability to suppress inflammation, more neuroinflammation, lower tolerance to stress/exertion, and perpetuation of chronic disease.
B. Autoimmunity against cholinergic receptors (e.g., anti-M3) → loss of the “vagal brake”
  • Vagal acetylcholine exerts powerful anti-inflammatory control and regulates autonomic functions (heart rate, gut motility, secretions, ocular accommodation).
  • Autoantibodies or T-cell responses against muscarinic receptors (M3) or nicotinic may block cholinergic signaling, reduce parasympathetic tone and cause dysautonomia: POTS, orthostatic intolerance, tachycardia, digestive symptoms, decreased secretions (eyes, saliva) and ocular changes.
  • Associated clinical picture: greater relative sympathetic activity, loss of anti-inflammatory control, and facilitation of immune chronicity. Early studies show associations between M3 responses and certain HLA-DR, supporting genetic predisposition.

11) Why these specific symptoms — dysautonomia, intestinal problems, dilated pupils and light sensitivity?
  • Dysautonomia (POTS, orthostatic intolerance): loss of vagal tone increases sympathetic response disrupting vascular and cardiac regulation upon standing → dizziness, tachycardia, fatigue.
  • Intestinal issues: the parasympathetic (vagus) drives motility and secretions; its blockade causes gastroparesis, intolerance, abdominal pain, altered transit.
  • Mydriasis and photophobia: pupillary constriction (miosis) is parasympathetic; if compromised → more dilated pupils, less light response, more light sensitivity.
  • Visual fatigue and light sensitivity (especially bright/blue light):
    • The ciliary muscle for accommodation (focus shifting) is innervated by M3 receptors.
    • If anti-M3 antibodies block them, accommodation becomes insufficient or slow → blurred vision and eye fatigue when reading or changing focus.
    • Blue light scatters more in imperfect optical media; poor accommodation forces more effort → fatigue, headache, discomfort. Dry eyes contribute, but poor accommodation is the main cause in many anti-M3 positive patients.

12) Cold and heat: the forgotten key

→ And why these patients worsen so much with heat and, in many cases, improve with cold.
This point is entirely consistent with autonomic physiology and anti-cholinergic autoimmunity.
❄️ Cold: better tolerance (in many cases)
Cold increases sympathetic tone, but:
  • Does not require sweating (via M3).
  • Does not demand intense parasympathetic regulation.
  • Sympathetic helps maintain blood pressure → better brain perfusion.
    In parasympathetic-deficient patients, cold doesn’t demand the system that is impaired. Typical result: better tolerance, less dizziness, less exhaustion, less brain fog.
    (Different from nicotinic myasthenia gravis, where cold improves neuromuscular transmission. Here it improves because it frees parasympathetic demand.)
️ Heat: enemy number one
Heat physiologically is a “stress test” for parasympathetic: the body needs to sweat to avoid overheating. Sweating depends on muscarinic receptors (M3).
If anti-M3 antibodies:
  • Sweating capacity is reduced (hypohidrosis) or absent (anhidrosis).
  • Body cannot dissipate heat.
  • Internal temperature rises.
  • Sympathetic surges to compensate → tachycardia, dizziness, racing heart, physiological anxiety.
    Additionally:
  • Heat produces skin vasodilation → drops blood pressure.
  • In dysautonomia, parasympathetic CANNOT compensate.
  • Result: even worse orthostatic intolerance.
    This perfectly explains why patients worsen so much with heat:
  • they don’t sweat → no regulation
  • they vasodilate → dizziness
  • sympathetic surges → palpitations
  • exhaustion → crash
    And why cold feels more tolerable.

13) Why does it (sometimes) improve with saline or volume increase?
  • IV saline provides an immediate increase in intravascular volume, improving venous return, blood pressure, and brain/muscle perfusion.
  • In dysautonomia due to parasympathetic loss, volume increase temporarily compensates the inability to maintain pressure upon standing → less dizziness, better brain perfusion → less fatigue and better tolerance for a few hours.
  • It is a physiological bridge (not a cure), but helps explain why hydration, added salt and, in selected cases, volume infusions can improve symptoms.

14) Morning fatigue

  • Morning tends to have a relatively sympathetic-favourable profile; if parasympathetic is impaired by anti-M3 antibodies, the gap worsens: orthostatic hypotension, tachycardia and intense fatigue upon rising. Also, if morning hypocortisolism is present, fatigue is even greater.


15) Mechanism interaction: the pro-inflammatory loop
  • Hypocortisolism → less hormonal control over inflammation → more neuroinflammation and less cholinergic modulation.
  • Loss of vagal brake → more peripheral and central inflammation → may alter HPA axis.
  • Result: a vicious cycle where persistent immunity/autoimmunity, neuroendocrine dysfunction and dysautonomia feed each other and perpetuate symptoms.

16) Observed treatments and why many patients respond to Mestinon (pyridostigmine)
  • Mestinon is an acetylcholinesterase inhibitor: increases acetylcholine available in synapses and autonomic ganglia. In practice, this strengthens residual cholinergic transmission, improves autonomic coordination and greatly helps orthostatic intolerance/POTS and morning fatigue. That’s why many Long COVID or ME/CFS patients feel better taking Mestinon upon waking or before standing: improves tolerance to standing, reduces postural tachycardia and gives more “start” for initial activity.
  • Cevimeline (M3 agonist) acts directly on M3 receptors and is more useful for localized symptoms such as dry eyes/mouth and accommodation problems (visual fatigue) but has less effect on ganglionic transmission and orthostasis; therefore less effective than Mestinon for POTS.
  • Important: none of these are cures if receptors are strongly blocked by antibodies. If blockade is partial, increasing ACh (Mestinon) may compete and improve function; if blockade is intense or causes receptor loss/internalization, increasing ACh doesn’t restore signaling because the target is unavailable.

17) Why this hypothesis fits other models (examples)
  • In chronic Borrelia (Lyme) arthritis, certain HLA-DR (e.g., DR4) are associated with refractory and autoimmune forms: showing how HLA predisposition may facilitate pathogen persistence and trigger autoimmunity.
  • In multiple sclerosis, HLA-DRB1*15:01 relates to poorer EBV control and higher autoimmune risk: example of how viral persistence + immune evasion can provoke autoimmune disease.
  • These parallels support the plausibility that HLA-II + antigen persistence + autoimmunity explain phenomena in Long COVID and ME/CFS.
This work would not have been possible without the support of the Solve ME/CFS Initiative fellowship and the dedication of Dr. Bruno Pasiva’s team and Aintzane Zabaleta at CIMA, University of Navarra, to whom we express our deepest gratitude.


Read the full article: https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/immunology/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2025.1710571/full
 
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