Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0409974 (
lupus
)
22,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The basis of autoimmune diseases such as SLE (Systemic
Lupus
Eritematodes), Sjogren's syndrome, scleroderma, dermatomyositis and polymiositis is the creation of auto-antibodies to the following specific extractable nuclear antigens (ENA):Jo-1, Ssl-70, SS-A, SS-B, Sm and Sm/RNPs. Some of these antigens are in fact enzymes (Jo-1-histidil-tRNA synthetase, Scl-70-
topoisomerase
) which are inhibited by specific autoantibodies--this leads to disturbance in the metabolism of DNA and protein biosynthesis. During 2009, we analyzed total of 87 serum samples of patients suspected for autoimmune disorder using ANA-IFA and ELISA-ENA-6 methods. After establishing IFA-ANA positivity (83.9%), all serum specimens; ANA positive and negative, were subtypized by ELISA ENA-6 test. Analysis showed the highest incidence of anti-SS-A (56%), and incidence of anti-SS-B (29.8%), anti-Sm/ RNP (11.5%), anti-Jo-1 (2.3%) and anti-Scl-70 (1,1%) auto-antibodies. Also, 78.5% of IFA-ANA negative serum specimens showed high level of positivity (212.50 and 277.0 IU/ml) to SS-A (78.5%) and SS-B (21.4%) antigenes using ELISA-ENA-6 subtypization. Following these results, we conclude that it is necessary to introduce Western blot confirmation testing. After comparing with other clinical findings, we diagnosed the following autoimmune diseases: SLE, Sjogren's syndrome and dermatomiosytis.
...
PMID:ELISA subtypization of anti-ENA autoantibodies in clinical management of autoimmune diseases in Bosnia and Herzegovina. 2038 Jan 8
The performance of immunoassays for the detection of autoantibodies is of critical importance to the diagnosis and assessment of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Our objective was to compare 3 multiplexed assays for measurement of multiple autoantibodies and their association with global disease activity, active nephritis and cumulative organ damage in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Stored sera, clinical and laboratory data from the enrollment visit of a long-term
lupus
registry were used. Autoantibodies were measured using the BioPlex 2200 ANA screen (Bio-Rad), QuantaPlex ENA8 (INOVA Diagnostics) and recomLine ANA/ENA (Mikrogen). The analytes included dsDNA, chromatin, ribosomal P protein, SS-A/Ro60, Ro52, SS-B/La, Sm, U1-RNP, centromere B,
topoisomerase
1 and Jo-1 (histidyl tRNA synthetase). Global SLE disease activity was measured by the SLE disease activity index (SLEDAI) and cumulative organ damage by the SLICC/ACR damage index (SDI). One hundred ninety two patients (87% female; 91% Caucasian; mean disease duration 8.8years) were studied. Agreement between the 3 assays varied from 70% to 99% (Cohen's kappa: 0.04-0.88). There were significant associations between SLEDAI scores (excluding anti-dsDNA) and ANA (INOVA, Mikrogen), anti-dsDNA (Bio-Rad, Mikrogen), anti-chromatin (Bio-Rad, INOVA), anti-Ro (Mikrogen), anti-Sm and anti-U1-RNP (all 3 immunoassays) (p=0.002-0.05). Concurrent lupus nephritis was associated with anti-dsDNA (Bio-Rad (p=0.017) or Bio-Rad and Mikrogen together (p=0.015)). There was no significant association between autoantibodies and SDI scores. The overall agreement between assays for the detection of autoantibodies was reasonable. The greatest discordance (70-83%) occurred with those autoantibodies most strongly associated with global SLE disease activity (ANA, anti-dsDNA, anti-chromatin and anti-Sm). Furthermore, there were differences between assays in their associations with global SLE disease activity and lupus nephritis.
...
PMID:Comparison between multiplex assays for autoantibody detection in systemic lupus erythematosus. 2043 30