Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P02749 (beta2-glycoprotein I)
836 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The antiphospholipid syndrome is a thrombophilic condition marked by antibodies that recognize anionic phospholipid-protein cofactor complexes. We recently reported that exposure to IgG fractions from antiphospholipid patients reduces the level of annexin-V, a phospholipid-binding anticoagulant protein, on cultured trophoblasts and endothelial cells and accelerates coagulation of plasma exposed to these cells. Therefore, we asked whether antiphospholipid antibodies might directly reduce annexin-V binding to noncellular phospholipid substrates. Using ellipsometry, we found that antiphospholipid IgGs reduce the quantity of annexin-V bound to phospholipid bilayers; this reduction is dependent on the presence of beta2-glycoprotein I. Also, exposure to plasmas containing antiphospholipid antibodies reduces annexin-V binding to phosphatidyl serine-coated microtiter plates, frozen thawed washed platelets, activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) reagent and prothrombin time reagent and reduces the anticoagulant effect of the protein. These studies show that antiphospholipid antibodies interfere with the binding of annexin-V to anionic phospholipid and with its anticoagulant activity. This acceleration of coagulation, due to reduced binding of annexin V, stands in marked contrast to the "lupus anticoagulant effect" previously described in these patients. These results are the first direct demonstration of the displacement of annexin-V and the consequent acceleration of coagulation on noncellular phospholipid surfaces by antiphospholipid antibodies.
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PMID:Antiphospholipid antibodies accelerate plasma coagulation by inhibiting annexin-V binding to phospholipids: a "lupus procoagulant" phenomenon. 971 93

We report two cases of antiphospholipid antibody syndrome with elevated anti-beta 2-glycoprotein I antibodies. Patient 1 had systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and was treated with an oral corticosteroid and aspirin. There were foci of sheathed retinal arterioles appearing as white lines in the fundus of both eyes. The sheathed arterioles of the peripheral fundus of the right eye were completely or incompletely occluded. Recanalization occurred during a 10 month follow-up. Patient 2 had hypertension and multiple brain infarction but no association with collagen diseases. Major retinal arterioles showed sheathing. Fluorescein angiography demonstrated progressive occlusion or stenosis of these major arterioles with extensive insufficiency of regional capillary bed circulation. Retinal photocoagulation was applied to both eyes which developed neovascularization. Vitrectomy was performed in the left eye with recurrent vitreous hemorrhage. Antiphospholipid antibody syndrome should be considered in cases of sheathed or white retinal arterioles.
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PMID:[The time course of white retinal arterioles in two cases of antiphospholipid antibody syndrome]. 972 Mar 68

Antiphospholipid antibodies associated with the antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) have been shown to bind plasma proteins, particularly beta 2-glycoprotein I (beta2-GPI). In this study the incidence of antibodies to solid-phase prothrombin was examined in patients with antiphospholipid syndrome and a variety of other inflammatory disorders. Significantly elevated levels of IgG anti-prothrombin (anti-PT) antibodies were detected in 63% of patients with APS (n = 27, median 22 arbitrary units: AU), 33% with SLE (n = 92, median 14 AU). 45% with rheumatoid factor (n = 22, median 16 AU), 21% with carotid artery stenosis (n = 21, median 15 AU), 32% with stroke (n = 38, median 13 AU). 67% of patients with a false positive serology for syphilis (n = 21, median 24 AU), 37% with HIV (n = 30, median 14 AU), 29% with syphilis (n = 14, median 19 AU) and 3% with infectious mononucleosis (n= 30, median 9 AU). In addition, a group of lupus anticoagulant (LA) positive patients (n = 48) was examined for antibodies to prothrombin, beta2-GPI and cardiolipin. 10 (21%) patients had raised levels of IgG anti-PT antibodies, 30 (62%) had significantly elevated levels of anti-beta2-GPI antibodies and 15 (31%) had elevated levels of anticardiolipin antibodies (ACA). Of the LA-positive patients, 15 (43%) were identified with definite APS, eight (23%) with probable APS, two (6%) with possible APS and 10 (28%) patients had no clinical evidence of APS. In conclusion, antibodies to prothrombin were found in a variety of inflammatory disorders and were therefore not specific for the APS. However, identification of the plasma proteins recognized by antibodies from patients with APS may provide insight into the pathogenic mechanisms involved in the heterogenous clinical manifestations of the APS.
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PMID:Antibodies to prothrombin in antiphospholipid syndrome and inflammatory disorders. 973 36

The prevalence and clinical significance of antibodies against beta2-glycoprotein I (anti-beta2GPI) and antibodies against oxidized low-density lipoprotein (anti-ox-LDL) were evaluated as potential indicators of arterial disease in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and SLE with secondary antiphospholipid syndrome (APS). IgG anti-beta2GPI and IgG anti-ox-LDL were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in serum samples from 118 patients with SLE, including 40 with secondary APS. IgG anti-beta2GPI were positive in 17% (20/118) of SLE patients. The presence and titres of IgG anti-beta2GPI were strongly associated with a history of arterial thrombosis. Haemolytic anaemia was also significantly associated with the presence of IgG anti-beta2GPI. The prevalence of IgG anti-ox-LDL was 53% (63/118), but there was no association with arterial thrombosis. No correlation between the values of anti-ox-LDL and those of anti-beta2GPI was found. These results suggest that IgG anti-beta2GPI could be a marker for arterial thrombosis in SLE patients, while IgG anti-ox-LDL were not associated with arterial disease in this group of lupus patients.
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PMID:Arterial disease in lupus and secondary antiphospholipid syndrome: association with anti-beta2-glycoprotein I antibodies but not with antibodies against oxidized low-density lipoprotein. 973 80

Most anticardiolipin antibodies (ACA) associated with antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) are directed against epitopes expressed on beta2-glycoprotein I (beta2GPI). Despite a good correlation between standard ACA assays and those using purified human beta2GPI as the sole antigen, some sera from APS patients only react in the latter. This is indicative of heterogeneity in anti-beta2GPI antibodies. To characterize their reactivity profiles, human and bovine beta2GPI were immobilized on gamma-irradiated plates (beta2GPI-ELISA), plain polystyrene precoated with increasing cardiolipin concentrations (CL/beta2GPI-ELISA), and affinity columns. Fluid-phase inhibition experiments were also carried out with both proteins. Of 56 selected sera, restricted recognition of bovine or human beta2GPI occurred respectively in 10/29 IgA-positive and 9/22 IgM-positive samples, and most of the latter (8/9) were missed by the standard ACA assay, as expected from a previous study. Based on species specificity and ACA results, IgG-positive samples (53/56) were categorized into three groups: antibodies reactive to bovine beta2GPI only (group I) or to bovine and human beta2GPI, group II being ACA-negative, and group III being ACA-positive. The most important group, group III (n = 33) was characterized by (i) binding when beta2GPI was immobilized on gamma-irradiated polystyrene or cardiolipin at sufficient concentration (regardless of beta2GPI density, as assessed using 125I-beta2GPI); (ii) and low avidity binding to fluid-phase beta2GPI (Kd in the range 10(-5) M). In contrast, all six group II samples showed (i) ability to bind human and bovine beta2GPI immobilized on non-irradiated plates; (ii) concentration-dependent blockade of binding by cardiolipin, suggesting epitope location in the vicinity of the phospholipid binding site on native beta2GPI; (iii) and relative avidities approximately 100-fold higher than in group III. Group I patients were heterogeneous with respect to CL/beta2GPI-ELISA and ACA results (6/14 scored negative), possibly reflecting antibody differences in terms of avidity and epitope specificity. Affinity fractionation of 23 sera showed the existence, in individual patients, of various combinations of antibody subsets solely reactive to human or bovine beta2GPI, together with cross-species reactive subsets present in all samples with dual reactivity namely groups III and II, although the latter antibodies were poorly purified on either column. Therefore, the mode of presentation of beta2GPI greatly influences its recognition by anti-beta2GPI antibodies with marked inter-individual heterogeneity, in relation to ACA quantitation and, possibly, disease presentation and pathogenesis.
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PMID:Heterogeneity and immunochemical properties of anti-beta2-glycoprotein I autoantibodies. 975 16

Beta-2-glycoprotein I (beta2GPI), a 50-kDA serum glycoprotein that binds negatively charged phospholipids plays a role in coagulation, thrombosis, and the clearance of phosphatidylserine expressing cells. Because of its recently recognized role in several autoimmune responses, we have developed a method that quantifies plasma beta2GPI levels by using a competitive ELISA assay. When combined with data from a standard ELISA, this method determines the concentration of free beta2GPI and the fraction of antibody-bound beta2GPI thereby facilitating quantification of total antigen in individuals with autoimmune antibodies. Standard competitive inhibition ELISA was compared with this method, which uses known amounts of standard beta2GPI added to the plasma as an internal standard. Identical results were obtained with both methods for plasma samples from normal individuals that did not contain blocking antibodies. Analysis of plasma from antiphospholipid syndrome patients (patients with autoantibodies to beta2GPI) by the internal standard method, however, resulted in significantly lower apparent beta2GPI levels indicating that a substantial fraction of the plasma beta2GPI was bound by antibody.
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PMID:Estimation of plasma beta-2-glycoprotein levels by competitive ELISA. 979 17

The authors have determined the prevalence of antibodies of cofactor dependent anticardiolipin and beta 2-glycoprotein I and lupus anticoagulant and the frequency of false positive VDRL test in systemic lupus erythematosus. The aim of this retrospective study was to assess the presence of these antibodies and symptoms of antiphospholipid syndrome. The serum samples were examined by modified ELISA method for detecting of cofactor dependent anticardiolipin. The antibodies to beta 2-glycoprotein I were examined by ELISA. The lupus anticoagulant and VDRL test were performed by routine laboratory method. The authors have found that 19 of 58 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus had cofactor dependent anticardiolipin, 10 patients had antibodies to beta 2-glycoprotein I and 4 patients had positive VDRL test. 5 of 34 plasma samples were lupus anticoagulant positive. 19 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus had 14 neuropsychiatric disorders, 9 cardiovascular diseases, 7 thrombocytopenia, 6 histories of recurrent abortion and fetal loss, 5 livedo reticularis and 3 thromboembolic events in all of them had detected antibodies to cofactor dependent anticardiolipin, while these complications were diagnosed in 39 anticardiolipin negative patients much more rarely. The results of this retrospective study suggest that significant association exists between the presence of cofactor dependent anticardiolipin and symptoms of antiphospholipid syndrome in systemic lupus erythematosus.
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PMID:[Clinical significance of antiphospholipid autoantibodies in lupus erythematosus]. 979 52

The plasma protein beta2-glycoprotein I (beta2-GPI) is a major target of autoantibodies in patients with the antiphospholipid syndrome. To understand the physiological function of beta2-GPI and its potential role in the pathophysiology of the antiphospholipid syndrome, the binding of beta2-GPI to phospholipid membranes was characterized. The interaction of beta2-GPI with unilamellar vesicles containing varying amounts of acidic phospholipids with phosphatidylcholine (PC) was measured at equilibrium via relative light scattering. Analysis of binding isotherms gave apparent Kd values ranging from approximately 5.0 to 0.5 microM over a range of 5-20 mol % anionic phospholipid. Inhibition of binding by increasing ionic strength and Ca2+ ions suggests that binding is primarily electrostatic. These data indicate that beta2-GPI binding to membranes with physiological anionic phospholipid content is relatively weak in comparison to plasma coagulation proteins, suggesting that beta2-GPI does not function as a physiological anticoagulant based on its phospholipid-binding properties.
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PMID:Characterization of beta2-glycoprotein I binding to phospholipid membranes. 979 80

Sera from 20 patients with antiphospholipid syndrome (APS), primary or secondary to systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), or with SLE, were assayed by immunoblot analysis for anti-beta2-glycoprotein I antibodies (abeta2-GPI), and by indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) technique for reactivity with astrocyte and neuron cell lines and with histological sections of human brain biopsies and monkey cerebellum. Six sera from healthy donors were studied as a control. Eleven out of the 20 patient sera contained abeta2-GPI and were immunoreactive with astrocytes and neurons, both in culture and in the histological sections, and with the endotheliocytes of the microvessels present in the histological sections. Cell localization and the pattern of immune reaction were similar to those obtained with a monoclonal antibody abeta2-GPI. Eight of the remaining patient sera, found abeta2-GPI-, did not react with the nervous substrates (and the control sera), while one exhibited immunoreactivity analogous to the abeta2-GPI+ sera. The interference of anticardiolipin antibodies (aCL) in the immunoreactivity with the nervous substrates was excluded since aCL were present in all patient sera and no immune reaction was observed in the histological sections incubated with a monoclonal aCL. Therefore, the binding of abeta2-GPI from patients to cells of the central nervous system (CNS) occurs independently from aCL. This issue may be relevant to further evaluate the potential pathogenetic role of abeta2-GPI in the CNS damage of APS-like conditions.
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PMID:Serum anti-beta2-glycoprotein I antibodies from patients with antiphospholipid antibody syndrome bind central nervous system cells. 980 25

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.
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PMID:Epitopes on beta2-GPI recognized by anticardiolipin antibodies. 981 65


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