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Query: UMLS:C0409974 (
lupus
)
22,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The relationship between fine specificity of linear epitopes and conformational determinants has been explored in a naturally arising human autoimmune response. In particular, the hypothesis tested is that the linear epitopes of the human Ro autoantigen are components of its conformational epitopes. Twenty groups among the 531 overlapping octapeptides 60 kDa Ro are variably bound by anti-Ro precipitin positive
lupus
sera whose reactivity was easily distinguished from sera of normal controls and of anti-Ro precipitin negative
lupus
patients. The specific activities of anti-peptide antibodies and of anti-native Ro autoantibodies are similarly increased after affinity enrichment using native human Ro as ligand. Moreover, affinity-enriched anti-native Ro autoantibodies bind virtually the same 20 groups of epitopes recognized by whole anti-Ro positive sera. Two peptides (residues 274-290 and 480-494) from the defined 60 kDa Ro octapeptide epitopes have been prepared and used as ligands for affinity purification of peptide specific autoantibodies. The binding of both whole IgG and affinity-enriched peptide specific autoantibodies is inhibited by native Ro autoantigen. Thus, none of the available data can be construed to support the existence of
cryptic
linear epitopes in this system. Indeed, the data are only consistent with the conclusion that all of the anti-Ro octapeptide autoantibodies are part of the population of anti-native Ro autoantibodies in this naturally arising autoimmune response.
...
PMID:Human anti-Ro autoantibodies bind peptides accessible to the surface of the native Ro autoantigen. 753 72
Systemic lupus erythematosus is characterized by high titers of autoantibodies directed at multiple proteins of the U1/Sm small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs). The origin of this type of autoimmunity, that is, whether it is initiated by foreign molecular mimics or by the self-snRNPs, is not known. In this study using normal mice, we investigated the presence of autoreactive B and T cells to the D protein of murine snRNPs. Although neither B nor T cell responses could be detected after immunization with native self-snRNPs, two synthetic self-peptides corresponding to amino acids 26-40 and 56-70 of the snRNP D protein elicited strong autoreactive T cell proliferation as well as a limited Ab response that bound the self-protein in immunoblots. T cells elicited by these peptides did not respond to stimulation with native snRNPs, suggesting that the peptides are
cryptic
and are not processed from the native protein for presentation by APCs. After priming with either of these
cryptic
self-peptides, exposure of the immune system to native murine snRNPs resulted in a diversified response with Abs that immunoprecipitated snRNPs and that produced an antinuclear immunofluorescence pattern on murine cell substrates. These studies demonstrate that autoreactive B and T cells specific for self-snRNPs are components of the normal repertoire of mouse lymphocytes; they have been neither deleted nor irreversibly anergized. Furthermore, we show that a diverse autoimmune response to
lupus
autoantigens, snRNPs, can originate from self-peptides without the influence of foreign Ags or molecular mimics.
...
PMID:Self-peptides in the initiation of lupus autoimmunity. 753
Some
lupus
anticoagulants (LA) have been shown to be directed against phospholipid-bound prothrombin. While developing an ELISA to detect anti-prothrombin autoantibodies in patient serum or plasma, no or very low signal was observed using human prothrombin immobilized on plain polystyrene plates. In contrast, the same LA-positive samples bound specifically to prothrombin coated on gamma-irradiated plates, depending on the radiation dose, in the absence of added calcium and phospholipid. Optimization of the assay required the addition of 0.1% Tween 20 to the buffers. Antibody specificity for immobilized prothrombin was ascertained by competition using liposome-bound prothrombin, since fluid-phase prothrombin competed poorly. Seventy-seven of 139 patients (55.4%) with LA related to a variety of underlying diseases possessed anti-prothrombin antibodies (27 IgG, 35 IgM and 15 both isotypes), either isolated or more often associated with anti-beta 2 glycoprotein I (beta 2GPI) antibodies. These included 67-71% of the patients with systemic lupus erythematosus and related disorders, primary antiphospholipid antibody syndrome or drug-induced LA (autoimmune groups), but only 19-20% of those with infection or malignancy (p < 0.001). As previously shown for anti-beta 2GPI antibodies, IgG2 was the predominant IgG subclass reactive with prothrombin. Thus, autoimmune patients with LA have a high incidence of antibodies to beta 2GPI and prothrombin, the binding of which could similarly require high antigen density and/or exposure of
cryptic
epitopes resulting from protein interaction with an irradiated (i.e. more anionic) polystyrene surface.
...
PMID:Development of an ELISA for autoantibodies to prothrombin showing their prevalence in patients with lupus anticoagulants. 856 Apr 23
We conducted this study to investigate whether antioxidized low-density lipoprotein (a-oxLDL) is an antibody to
cryptic
and/or neo-antigen on beta2-glycoprotein I (GPI), which is introduced by binding to anionic phospholipid, similar to that of GPI-dependent anticardiolipin antibody (aCL) employing a-oxLDL ELISA. We found that no significant optical density differences existed among systemic lupus erythematosus patients, including cases with aCL and/or
lupus
anticoagulant positivity, before and after the addition of GPI. Our results suggest that a-oxLDL is not an antibody to denatured GPI, but rather to oxLDL.
...
PMID:Negligible synergistic effect of beta2-glycoprotein I on the reactivity of antioxidized low-density lipoprotein antibody to oxidized low-density lipoprotein. 863 31
Cardiolipin binding of IgG-class anticardiolipin antibody (aCL) depends on the existence of beta 2-glycoprotein I (beta 2-GPI). We developed an EIA system that enables detection of antibodies against beta 2-GPI, without the presence of cardiolipin. This system involves use of irradiated polystyrene plates, in which oxygen atoms are introduced onto the surfaces of the plates. beta 2-GPI bound to the surface of these plates is assumed to undergo a conformational change that exposes normally
cryptic
epitopes. Anti-beta 2-GPI antibody measured using this EIA system showed good correlation with aCL measured by conventional EIA methods and may prove useful in evaluating the risk of thrombosis and monitoring the clinical course in patients with SLE. Utilizing this EIA system and beta 2-GPI-deleted mutants, we found that the fourth domain of beta 2-GPI is involved in expression of one of the
cryptic
epitopes recognized by aCL. We also found that oxidized LDL are sequentially targeted by beta 2-GPI and aCL.
Lupus
1996 Oct
PMID:Anti-beta 2-glycoprotein I antibody: specificity and clinical significance. 890 64
The family of antiphospholipid antibodies includes antibodies binding to cardiolipin in serological test for syphilis, antibodies prolonging the clotting time in
lupus
anticoagulant test, antibodies reacting with plasma phospholipid-binding proteins, such as beta 2-glycoprotein I and prothrombin, and antibodies binding to oxidized low-density lipoprotein (LDL). Antiphospholipid antibodies are traditionally associated with arterial and venous thrombosis in patients with primary or secondary antiphospholipid syndrome. The recent studies, especially those on patients with myocardial infarction, extend the concept of antiphospholipid antibodies, and suggest that they play a role also in atherosclerosis. Based on the clinical studies and immunological findings, it seems that the differences in the specificity of antiphospholipid antibodies may reflect to their pathogenetic mechanisms and, finally, to their clinical consequences. The present review suggests that antibodies to oxidized LDL may not interfere directly with blood coagulation, but seem to have importance in the inflammation of the vessel wall in atherosclerosis and in vasculitis. Instead, antibodies to beta 2-glycoprotein I and to prothrombin show a closer association with thrombosis. It is possible that in the atherosclerotic plaque, the plasma proteins, such as beta 2-glycoprotein I or prothrombin, are bound to the endothelial surface and antibodies to
cryptic
epitopes revealed in these proteins are induced. These antibodies may contribute to the formation of atherosclerotic thrombosis by changing the balance of haemostasis toward hypercoagulative state.
Lupus
1996 Oct
PMID:Antiphospholipid antibodies and atherosclerosis. 890 78
Idiosyncratic adverse drug reactions have characteristics that suggest involvement of the immune system. In particular, drug-induced
lupus
which is an autoimmune syndrome, must be immune-mediated. A major working hypothesis for the first step in the mechanism of drug-induced autoimmunity is that the drug, or more commonly a reactive metabolite of the drug, must irreversibly bind to some structure. In view of the reactive nature of these metabolites, in most cases it is likely that the metabolite must be formed in the organ where toxicity occurs. The liver is the major site of drug metabolism and it is a common target for idiosyncratic drug reactions. In the case of immune reactions directly involving leukocytes, the enzyme system most likely responsible for the formation of reactive metabolites is the NADPH oxidase/myeloperoxidase system found in neutrophils and monocytes. In some cases, the reactive metabolite results in the production of antibodies or T-cells directed against the altered structure. However, in many other cases, the mechanism appears to be more complex than this. In some cases, true auto-antibodies are produced that do not require the presence of the drug, and furthermore, the antibodies produced often are the same as those induced by other stimuli, such as viruses. This suggests either molecular mimicry or a common alteration in the processing and presentation of antigens such that
cryptic
antigens are presented. Another possibility is that the reactive metabolite directly alters the class II MHC molecule leading to a graft-vs-host reaction.
...
PMID:Current trends in drug-induced autoimmunity. 912 93
Autoantibodies to CRP were reported previously in patients suffering from toxic oil syndrome. This syndrome resembles autoimmune diseases such as systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) or systemic scleroderma. We therefore examined the prevalence of antibodies to CRP and other acute-phase proteins in autoimmune diseases, including SLE, subacute cutaneous
lupus erythematosus
(SCLE), systemic scleroderma (SSc), and primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC), as well as in bone marrow transplantation-induced chronic graft-versus-host disease and eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome. IgG antibodies to CRP were found in 78% of SLE and in 30% of SCLE patients, while 16% of patients with PBC were positive. In up to 45% of patients with SSc predominantly IgG antibodies to ceruloplasmin were detectable. Lack of systemic involvement as in discoid lupus erythematosus and localized scleroderma (morphea) correlated with low or absent antibody formation. However, no correlation was found between anti-acute-phase protein antibodies with liver disease or other organ involvement. Adsorption studies revealed that non-native epitopes on the CRP molecule, termed modified CRP, are the main target of antibodies. Chronic inflammatory tissue injury in systemic autoimmune disease might increase the presentation of
cryptic
epitopes of CRP to the threshold required for T cell activation.
...
PMID:Autoantibodies to C-reactive protein (CRP) and other acute-phase proteins in systemic autoimmune diseases. 973 58
Anticardiolipin antibodies (aCL) found in sera from patients with antiphospholipid syndrome recognize a
cryptic
epitope that appears on the beta2-glycoprotein I (beta2-GPI) molecule when beta2-GPI interacts with a lipid membrane composed of negatively charged phospholipid or when beta2-GPI is adsorbed on a polyoxygenated polystyrene plate. A homology based model of beta2-GPI was constructed based on the NMR coordinates of sushi domains of human factor H. The conformation was like a cylinder consisting of five domains, its IV and V domains being glued by electrostatic interaction. We used phage-displayed random peptide libraries to search the epitopes of human aCL. Structures similar to consensus sequences selected by a biopanning method was found on domain IV of beta2-GPI.
Lupus
1998
PMID:Epitopes on beta2-GPI recognized by anticardiolipin antibodies. 981 65
Beta2-Glycoprotein I (beta2-GPI) is a major antigen for anticardiolipin antibodies (aCL) induced in patients with antiphospholipid syndrome and their antigenic epitopes are
cryptic
. The epitopes appear on the surface of beta2-GPI molecule only when beta2-GPI interacts with lipid membranes containing negatively charged phospholipids or polyoxygenated polystyrene surface. Our data also indicated that CuSO4-oxidized low density lipoproteins (oxLDL) are subsequently targeted by beta2-GPI and aCL; however, malonedialdehyde (MDA)-modified LDL were recognized neither by beta2-GPI nor aCL. Beta2-GPI binding to LDL was rapidly increased by incubation with CuSO4. Oxidation of lipoproteins was accompanied with the increment of thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBARS) and denature of apolipoprotein. Ligands on LDL for beta2-GPI seemed to be intermediate oxidative derivatives which were extractable into the chloroform phase by Bligh and Dyer's extraction, but not MDA. Further, immune responses against beta2-GPI, as an anti-atherogenic protein, were demonstrated to induce atherogenic effect in in vitro oxLDL uptake by macrophages.
Lupus
1998
PMID:Antiphospholipid antibodies and atherosclerosis. 981 91
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