Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024141 (systemic lupus erythematosus)
44,322 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

ARA occur in approximately 10% of randomly selected SLE patients but in up to 40% of patients with active disease. Anti-P antibodies appear to be a highly specific diagnostic marker for SLE because they are rarely detected in other multisystem autoimmune disorders. ARA are most frequently directed against the P proteins, and the shared conserved C-terminus of the P proteins is immunodominant in almost all sera tested. Anti-P antibodies increase in titer in patients with active disease and have been reported to be detected more frequently in patients with severe behavioral disturbances. This may be particularly true of patients with affective disorders. The clinical utility of serologic tests for anti-P in central nervous system lupus must await large, prospective studies. Other ARA antibodies have been detected in patients with SLE. These antibodies include anti-28S rRNA, anti-S10, and anti-L12. In all cases, the frequency with which these antibodies are detected is increased in sera containing anti-P. The P proteins and the 28S rRNA epitope play essential, but as yet undefined, roles in GTPase activity on the ribosome. The L12 protein is the mammalian homologue of the E. coli and yeast proteins known to bind to the 28S rRNA epitope. These findings indicate that some SLE patients produce autoantibodies against multiple components of a functionally related domain of the ribosome. This, in turn, supports the notion that the ribosome initiates and/or maintains autoantibody production. Despite these findings, attempts to induce anti-P antibodies by immunization with autologous ribosomes in the autoimmune strain of mouse, MRL, have been unsuccessful. It therefore seems likely that the ribosomal components must be altered to break tolerance or that other abnormalities of the immune system are necessary for autoantibody production.
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PMID:Antiribosomal antibodies in systemic lupus erythematosus. 137 26

Antibodies to ribosomal protein components were examined in sera from 89 patients with active systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). The anti-P, anti-S10 and anti-L12 antibodies were detected in 37, 28 and 2 patients, respectively. They were not detected in patients with various autoimmune diseases other than SLE or in healthy donors, which indicates that antiribosomal protein antibodies in sera are specific for patients with SLE. These antibodies are prevalent in patients with SLE and should provide good markers for the diagnosis of this disease.
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PMID:Autoantibodies against ribosomal proteins found with high frequency in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus with active disease. 178 88

New antibodies reactive with a 20 KDal ribosomal protein of the large subunit were found in sera from two of eighty patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. This antigenic protein was identified as L12 by the mobility in two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Both sera also contained anti-P activity against three acidic phosphoproteins (P proteins), but this activity was completely inhibited by preincubation with the isolated P proteins. Therefore, these anti-L12 can be useful for studying the function of L12 in protein synthesis.
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PMID:Autoantibodies specific for the 20-KDal ribosomal large subunit protein L12. 224 50

Approximately 20% of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus and with anti-Sm autoantibodies synthesize autoantibodies, called anti-rRNP, to components of the ribosome. We found that anti-rRNP sera reacted predominantly with three ribosomal phosphoproteins of approximate Mr = 38,000, 16,000 and 15,000, both by immunoprecipitation and by immunoblotting. The human autoantibodies cross-reacted with similar antigens present in rodent, brine shrimp, and yeast cells but reacted weakly if at all with proteins of bacteria. Thus the human autoantibodies recognize epitopes that are widely conserved in evolution. Purified ribosomal proteins together with specific rabbit antisera were used to identify the two smaller rRNP antigens as the acidic phosphoproteins of the large ribosomal subunit, designated P1/P2(L40/L41) (rat), eL7/eL12 (Artemia, brine shrimp), and A1/A2 (yeast). These proteins function in the elongation step of protein synthesis in an analogous fashion to the L7/L12 ribosomal proteins of E. coli. The 38,000-dalton rRNP antigen corresponds to a nonacidic protein also associated with the large ribosomal subunit. The human autoantibodies appear to have a specificity similar to that of a previously described mouse monoclonal antibody obtained from mice injected with heterologous (chick) ribosomes, suggesting that both the human polyclonal autoantibodies and the mouse monoclonal recognize a class of epitope(s) that is common in all three ribosomal proteins. In addition, we found that many of the anti-ribosomal sera contained a further class of autoantibodies reactive with naked RNA. These may be similar to the anti-RNA antibodies previously described in both humans and mice with autoimmune disease.
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PMID:Identification of ribosomal protein autoantigens. 389 74

Site-specific anti-RNA antibodies were sought in 120 sera of patients with autoimmune diseases by ribonuclease-protection assay using six fragments covering 28S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) as antigens. Fifteen of 90 sera from patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), but none of 30 sera of the other autoimmune diseases, provided a 60 nucleotide fragment within a region termed the 'GTPase domain' of 28S rRNA. These sera had potency to precipitate 0.42-69.3 nmol of the RNA domain per ml serum, which was higher than 15 control sera of healthy donors. No other specific antigenic site was detected in 28S rRNA under conditions used. All of the 15 sera having this anti-RNA antibody showed reactivity to ribosomal P proteins (anti-P), and two of them contained an additional antibody to ribosomal protein L12. These results suggested a strong association of the production of these three antibodies. Since P and L12 proteins form a stable complex with the GTPase domain, this serological association may result from an immune response to epitopes clustered on a single RNA-protein complex domain in ribosomes.
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PMID:Serological association of lupus autoantibodies to a limited functional domain of 28S ribosomal RNA and to the ribosomal proteins bound to the domain. 792 81

ARA occur in approximately 10% of randomly selected SLE patients but in up to 40% of patients with active disease. Anti-P antibodies appear to be a highly specific diagnostic marker for SLE since they are rarely detected in other multisystem autoimmune disorders. ARA are most frequently directed against the P proteins and the shared conserved C-terminus of the P proteins is immunodominant in almost all sera tested. Anti-P antibodies increase in titer in patients with active disease and have been reported to be detected more frequently in patients with severe behavioral disturbances. This may be particularly true of patients with affective disorders. The clinical utility of serological tests for anti-P in central nervous system lupus must await large, prospective studies. Other ARA antibodies have been detected in patients with SLE. These antibodies include anti-28S rRNA, anti-S10, and anti-L12. In all cases, the frequency with which these antibodies are detected is increased in sera containing anti-P. The P proteins and the 28S rRNA epitope play essential, but as yet undefined, roles in GTPase activity on the ribosome. The L12 protein is the mammalian homologue of the E. coli and yeast proteins known to bind to the 28S rRNA epitope. These findings indicate that some SLE patients produce autoantibodies against multiple components of a functionally related domain of the ribosome. This, in turn, supports the notion that the ribosome initiates and/or maintains autoantibody production. Despite the evidence supporting an antigen driven immune response, attempts to induce anti-P antibodies by immunization with autologous ribosomes in the autoimmune strain of mouse, MRL, have been unsuccessful. It therefore seems likely that the ribosomal components must be altered in some way to break tolerance or that other abnormalities of the immune system are necessary for autoantibody production. Immunization with foreign ribosomes induce anti-P autoantibodies in mice and in apparently normal humans infected with the hemoflaggelate, T. cruzi. The ability of the P proteins to break tolerance in these situations is, most likely, explained by the provision of a T cell epitope (the foreign P protein) together with the multivalency of the P proteins on the ribosome (which activate autoreactive B cells). We therefore propose (Fig. 5) a two-signal model for autoantibody production similar to that suggested for T-B collaboration in the normal immune response and also in the GVHD model of lupus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Antiribosomal antibodies in SLE, infection, and following deliberate immunization. 797 36

Autoantibodies to the 20-kDa ribosomal proteins (L12/S10) are not well studied, especially in juveniles with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Randomly selected sera from American juveniles and adults with SLE were screened for antibodies to either 20-kDa protein and P proteins and then assayed for anti-L12 and anti-S10 by immunoblot assays. In a pilot study of patients with anti-P (Cohort 1), IgG antibodies to either 20-kDa protein and, specifically, to L12 were observed in 72 and 42% of juveniles and adults, respectively. IgG antibodies to S10 were detected less frequently. In Cohort 2 patients who were chosen irrespective of autoantibody status, twice as many juveniles as adults had IgG antibodies to either 20-kDa protein. Prevalences of IgG anti-L12 and IgG anti-S10 antibodies in the juveniles were 28 and 16% and in the adults were 13 and 12%, respectively. Anti-L12 were strongly but not invariably associated with anti-P, and usually arose temporally to these antibodies. Anti-S10 activity was due to anti-Sm antibodies. We conclude that IgG anti-L12 are more prevalent in SLE than previously reported, and are responsible for the majority of activity toward the 20-kDa ribosomal proteins, especially in juveniles.
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PMID:Autoantibodies to the 20-kDa ribosomal proteins: identification, characterization, and new aspects on prevalence in systemic Lupus erythematosus. 1116 82