Myasthenia gravis (MG) is an autoimmune disease that results in failure of neuromuscular transmission. Earlier theories of the dominant role of pathologic autoantibodies against target antigens (nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, muscle-specific tyrosine kinase and low-density lipoprotein receptor) were corrected following discovery of immune dysregulation at the level of T cells - between Th1 and Th2 and/or between T regulatory cells and Th17 cells, proliferation of CD8+ lymphocytes, chemokines, cytokines and other molecules.
The immune system dysfunction can occur at different levels of the immune response: helper CD4+ T cells, cytotoxic CD8+ T cells, regulatory CD4+CD25+ T lymphocytes, Th17 lymphocytes, B lymphocytes and plasma cells. Thymus plays a dominant immunopathogenetic role in younger patients with MG, while extrathymic mechanisms are applied in older patients.
Different immunologic mechanisms play a role in MG associated with a thymoma