IMR Press / RCM / Volume 24 / Issue 4 / DOI: 10.31083/j.rcm2404109
Open Access Review
Clinical Signs of Kawasaki Disease from the Perspective of Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition Recruiting Erythrocytes: A Literature Review
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1 Department of Pediatrics, St.Vincent's Hospital, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, 16247 Seoul, Republic of Korea
2 Department of Dermatology, Boramae Medical Center, College of Medicine, Seoul National University, 07061 Seoul, Republic of Korea
3 Department of Ophthalmology & Laboratory of Visual Science, St.Vincent’s Hospital, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, 16247 Seoul, Republic of Korea
*Correspondence: jeany@catholic.ac.kr (Jin-Hee Oh)
Rev. Cardiovasc. Med. 2023, 24(4), 109; https://doi.org/10.31083/j.rcm2404109
Submitted: 9 January 2023 | Revised: 5 March 2023 | Accepted: 14 March 2023 | Published: 17 April 2023
Copyright: © 2023 The Author(s). Published by IMR Press.
This is an open access article under the CC BY 4.0 license.
Abstract

Kawasaki disease (KD) is a systemic vasculitis affecting children younger than 5 years of age. Early period in life is marked by rapid somatic growth with cell proliferation and immaturity of the immunity with dominant innate immune system. Coronary complications in KD are the most common acquired heart disease in children, yet the diagnosis of KD still depends on the clinical diagnostic criteria. Glossy red lips and conjunctival injection are characteristic signs enabling pediatricians to make the initial diagnosis of KD; however, little is known why these are so characteristic. The diagnostic criteria of KD seem to be scattered in seemingly irrelevant body systems such as the eyes, lips, skin, and heart. KD is classified as a connective tissue disease. Recently, red blood cells (RBCs) have emerged as important modulators in innate immune response. RBCs are reported to participate in extracellular matrix remodeling and upregulating matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) expression in dermal fibroblasts. Also, fibroblast growth factors and microRNAs associated with fibrosis are drawing attention in KD. The cardinal signs of KD appear at the border of muco-cutaneous junction. Head and neck regions are abundant in tissues undergoing epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Interstitial carditis and valve insufficiency as well as coronary arterial lesions may complicate KD, and these lesions present in tissues that originated from epicardial progenitor cells by EMT. Having reviewed the recent research on KD, we presume that the signs of KD present at borders between keratinized and non-keratinized stratified squamous epithelium where the EMT is still ongoing for the rapid somatic growth where RBCs are recruited as an innate immune response and to prevent excessive fibrosis in mucosa. KD presents scarcely in adults with somatic growth and immune maturation completed. In this review, we attempted to explain the reasons for the clinical manifestations of KD and to search for a link among the diagnostic clues in the perspective of EMT during the somatic growth and immune system maturation in children with KD.

Keywords
mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome
epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition
innate immunity
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