Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027121 (myositis)
4,538 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Myositis autoantibodies continue to be the subject of substantial interest, with several significant recent developments. Recent studies have emphasized that anti-Jo-1 or other antisynthetases can be associated with interstitial lung disease, even in the absence of myositis. Anti-Jo-1 autoantibody levels were shown to correlate with disease activity over time. Immunization of mice with anti-Jo-1 led to muscle and lung inflammation, reminiscent of human disease. The complexity of the antibody picture in myositis continues to increase. Several new autoantibodies have been described or better characterized. Among these were a new antisynthetase reactive with phenylalanyl-transfer RNA synthetase (anti-Zo); an autoantibody that immunoprecipitates 155- and 140-kD proteins and was common in children but seemed to be associated with malignancy in adults; and an autoantibody to a small ubiquitin-like modifier--activating enzyme associated with dermatomyositis and interstitial lung disease. These findings have significant clinical implications and suggest promising areas of further research.
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PMID:Autoantibodies and their significance in myositis. 1866 15

Antisynthetase syndrome (ASS) is a rare chronic autoimmune disorder (2-3 times more common in women than in men), associated with interstitial lung disease (the most important feature), dermatomyositis (DM), and polymyositis (PM). The cause of ASS is unknown. Recent developments in immunology have improved our knowledge and it is now possible to classify ASS according to the presence of myositis specific autoantibodies. The hallmark of ASS is the presence of serum autoantibodies directed against aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (anti-ARS involved in protein synthesis). ASS is due to IgG antibodies directed against the enzyme synthase. Antisynthetase antibodies (ASAb) include: anti-histidyl- (anti-Jo-1, being the best known), anti-threonyl- (anti-PL-7), anti-alanyl (anti-PL-12), anti-isoleucyl- (anti-OJ), anti-glycyl- (anti-EJ), anti-asparaginyl- (anti-KS), anti-Wa, anti-tyrosil- (anti-YRS), anti-phenylalanyl-transfer RNA synthetase (anti-Zo), and anti-signal recognition particle (anti-SRP). Anti-Jo-1 is the most common ASAb (in ~20-30% of PM/DM patients).
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PMID:New Insights into Antisynthetase Syndrome. 2846 32