Diseases Associated with Immune System Disorders in Allergic Diseases

Authors

  • Davurova Laylo Assistant Professor, Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Samarkand State Medical University
  • Urinova Lola Abduvasi qizi Students of group 507, Faculty of Pharmacy, Samarkand State Medical University

Keywords:

Autoimmune hemolytic anemia, Bullous pemphigoid, Cutaneous lupus erythematosus, Type 1 diabetes

Abstract

Some proteins and many polypeptide drugs (e.g., insulin, therapeutic antibodies) can directly stimulate antibody production. However, many drugs act as haptens, covalently binding to serum or cellular proteins, including proteins that make up the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules. This binding makes the protein-drug complex immunogenic, stimulating antibody production and/or a T-cell response to the drug. Haptens can directly bind to MHC class II molecules and directly activate T lymphocytes. Some drugs act as prohaptens. Prohaptens are converted to haptens through metabolic reactions; For example, penicillin itself is not an antigen, but its major degradation product, benzylpenicilloic acid, can combine with tissue proteins to form benzylpenicilloyl (BPO), a major antigenic determinant. Some drugs bind directly to and stimulate T cell receptors (TCRs); the clinical significance of nonhapten binding to the TCR remains to be determined (1).

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Published

2025-02-10

How to Cite

Laylo, D., & qizi, U. L. A. (2025). Diseases Associated with Immune System Disorders in Allergic Diseases. American Journal of Bioscience and Clinical Integrity, 2(2), 7–13. Retrieved from https://biojournals.us/index.php/AJBCI/article/view/564

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