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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The two moulds, Alternaria alternata and Cladosporium herbarum, are recognized as major causes of fungal allergies. Cloning, sequencing and heterologous expression of the allergens of the two moulds is a necessary step in understanding fungal allergy and in the development of new and improved methods of diagnosis and therapy. The seven new mould allergens presented here represent four new allergen proteins: aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH), enolase, YCP4 (previously found as a Saccharomyces cerevisiae protein of unknown function), and the acidic ribosomal protein, P2. Three of them (ALDH, YCP4 and P2) were found to be allergens in both fungi, Alternaria and Cladosporium. All allergens found so far are cytoplasmic proteins and are rather well conserved in evolution even when comparing distant species. Most of the allergens have "household" functions (ALDH, enolase). One allergen (P2) is a homolog of a very highly conserved human
lupus
erythematodes (LE) antigen. None of the fungal allergens is clearly related to other known non-fungal allergens.
Mol
Immunol 1995 Feb
PMID:Molecular cloning of major and minor allergens of Alternaria alternata and Cladosporium herbarum. 789 96
Roughly 20% of all clinical pregnancies evolve into "spontaneous abortions". The causes of spontaneous abortion have been determined in under 60% of the total and comprise genetic, infectious, hormonal and immunological factors. In some cases the immune tolerance mechanism may be impaired and the foetus immunologically rejected (IMA, immunologically mediated abortion). The immunological mechanism implicated depends on the time in which pregnancy loss takes place. During preimplantation and up to the end of implantation (13th day) the cell-mediated immune mechanism (potential alloimmune etiologies) is responsible for early abortion. This mechanism involves immunocompetent decidual cells (eGL, endometrial granulated lymphocytes) already present during pre-decidualization (late luteal phase) and their production of soluble factors or cytokines. Once the implantation process is over, after blastocyst penetration of the stroma and the decidual reaction of uterine tissue, IMA could be caused by cell-mediated and humoral mechanism (anti-paternal cytotoxic antibodies or autoantibody etiology), by the production of paternal anti major histocompatibility complex antibodies, or even by an autoimmune disorder leading to the production of autoantibodies (antiphospholipid antibodies, antinuclear antibodies or polyclonal B cell activation). The diagnostic work-up adopted to select IMA patients is crucial and includes primary (karyotype of both partners, toxo-test, hysterosalpingography, endometrial biopsy, thyroid function tests, serum hprolactin, luteal phase dating) and secondary (full hemochromocytometric test, search for LE cells,
lupus
anticoagulant, anticardiolipin, antinuclear antibodies, Rheumatoid factor, blood complement VDRL) investigations. Therapeutical approaches vary. If autoimmune disorders are demonstrated therapies with different combinations of corticosteroids, aspirin and heparin or intravenous immunoglobulin are administered. Otherwise, therapy with paternal or donor peripheral blood mononuclear cells should be instituted.
J Steroid Biochem
Mol
Biol 1994 Jun
PMID:Immunologically mediated abortion (IMA). 803 7
Production of IgG3 in MRL/Mp-lpr/lpr (MRL/lpr)
lupus
mice is one of the major factors to develop glomerulonephritis (GN) in these mice. To examine molecular characteristics of IgG3 responsible for GN in these mice, hybridoma clones producing IgG3 antibodies were prepared from one unmanipulated MRL/lpr mouse. Two clones, 2B11.3 and 7B6.8, were nephritogenic; that is, they caused severe glomerular lesions when injected to normal mice, moreover with a different histopathological manifestation. The 2B11.3 clone generated diffuse cell-proliferative lesions, while those induced by the 7B6.8 clone resembled wire loop lesions in human lupus nephritis. The cDNA sequence analysis of 7B6.8 antibody and the other IgG3 antibody, 1G3, non-nephritogenic, revealed that the C regions of the heavy and light kappa chains were completely the same between them. Furthermore, they were identical in deduced amino acid sequences to those from non-autoimmune BALB/c mice, indicating no allelic difference of Igh-8 between these two strains. The V regions of 2B11.3 and 7B6.8 antibodies were composed of different sets of VH, D, JH, Vk and Jk. Although both of the VH belonged to the J558 family, they seemed to use a different VH germline gene. These findings suggest that GN in MRL/lpr mice is generated by the expansion of clonally different B cells producing particular antibodies possibly with a different pathogenetic potency.
Mol
Immunol 1993 Feb
PMID:Cloning and cDNA sequence analysis of nephritogenic monoclonal antibodies derived from an MRL/lpr lupus mouse. 842 33
An anti-DNA hybridoma derived from an MRL/lpr mouse secretes two different kappa light chains in combination with a single heavy chain. Multiple single cell clones express and secrete immunoglobulin containing both kappa light chains. The N-terminal protein sequences of the light chains correspond to sequences predicted from functionally rearranged mRNAs subjected to reverse transcription and amplified by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Karyotype analysis of the hybridoma indicates a clonal line derived from the fusion of two cells. By amino acid sequence comparison and PCR analysis, both functional kappa light chains are derived from the MRL/lpr spleen. The two functional light chain cDNAs were cloned and co-transfected into COS-7 cells with the heavy chain cDNA. Only one of the light chains in combination with mAb 3E10 heavy chain confers anti-DNA reactivity. The presence of two separate kappa light chains and, therefore, two separate antigen receptors on a single B cell may have ramifications for both polyclonal activation and toleration of
lupus
B cells.
Mol
Immunol 1995 Dec
PMID:Two kappa immunoglobulin light chains are secreted by an anti-DNA hybridoma: implications for isotypic exclusion. 864 4
Antibodies H241 and 2C10 are
lupus
mouse IgG autoantibodies that bind native DNA. In previous experiments, oligonucleotide antigens affinity-labeled both H and L chains of H241 but only the H chain of antibody 2C10. Primary structures of the V regions of the 2C10 H and L chains and the H241 L chain, determined from cDNA, help to explain the previous affinity-labeling experiments. The 2C10 L chain CDRs had several Asp residues and a net negative charge of five, whereas the 2C10 H chain CDRs had four Arg residues and a net positive charge of five. The L chain CDRs of H241 had a net positive charge of one. [The H241 H chain cDNA sequence was published previously by Gangemi et al. (1993) J. Immun. 151, 4660-4671]. Plasmid vectors were used for bacterial expression of H and L chains of 2C10 alone and in combinations in single chain Fv (scFv) molecules. The H chain alone bound native DNA as well as or better than the H-plus-L chain scFv. The H chain alone also bound Z-DNA. Combination of the 2C10 H chain with the L chain of an anti-Z-DNA antibody maintained the selectivity for Z-DNA, whereas its combination with the 2C10 L chain (in the 2C10 Fab) yielded selective B-DNA binding. The results with 2C10 match other examples in which the H chain is sufficient for DNA binding but selectivity is modulated by the L chain. The H chain binding to autoantigen may reflect selective events in early stages of B cell development.
Mol
Immunol 1996 Feb
PMID:Heavy chain dominance in the binding of DNA by a lupus mouse monoclonal autoantibody. 864 41
Calreticulin is a new human rheumatic disease-associated autoantigen that plays a multifaceted role in cell biology. In earlier studies, this protein was shown to share an intimate relationship with the Ro/SS-A autoantigen complex, although the nature of this association continues to be debated. Since modulation of the Ro/SS-A autoantigen in epidermal keratinocytes has been implicated in the pathogenesis of subacute cutaneous
lupus erythematosus
and neonatal
lupus erythematosus
, we have begun to examine the transcriptional regulation of calreticulin. A 504 bp calreticulin promoter fragment was subcloned into a reporter gene plasmid containing firefly luciferase. Calcium ionophore, heat shock, and heavy metals such as zinc and cadmium were consistently found to increase calreticulin transcriptional activities in A431 cells (a human epidermoid squamous carcinoma cell line) under transient transfection conditions. These studies suggest that (a) calreticulin is regulated at the transcriptional level, and (b) calreticulin, like some other LE-related autoantigens, appears to function as a heat shock/stress-response gene.
Mol
Immunol
PMID:Calreticulin is transcriptionally upregulated by heat shock, calcium and heavy metals. 867 89
Chromatin, a huge polymer of nucleosomes, has been implicated as an important target of autoantibodies in idiopathic and drug-induced
lupus
for decades, but the antigenicity of chromatin has only recently been dissected. IgG reactivity with the (H2A-H2B)-DNA complex, a subunit of the nucleosome, is present in the majority of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus, in > 90% of patients with
lupus
induced by procainamide and in individual patients with
lupus
induced by a variety of other drugs, but is not seen in people taking these medications who are clinically asymptomatic. Anti-[(H2A-H2B)-DNA] accounted for the bulk of the anti-chromatin activity in drug-induced
lupus
. The earliest detectable autoantibody in
lupus
-prone mice recognized similar epitopes in the (H2A-H2B)-DNA subnucleosome complex; as the immune response progressed, native DNA and other constituents of chromatin became antigenic. The importance of chromatin-reactive T cells in the anti-[(H2A-H2B)-DNA] response is suggested by the presence of somatic mutations in antibody VH and VL regions, their predominant IgG isotype and the similarity in kinetics of their production to that of conventional T cell dependent antigens. Together with the serologic data from human
lupus
-like disease, these results are consistent with chromatin being a common stimulant for both B and T cells. While chromatin-reactive antibodies are closely associated with systemic disease and have recently been implicated in glomerulonephritis in SLE, the absence of renal disease in drug-induced
lupus
indicates that additional abnormalities are required to manifest the serious pathogenic of anti-[(H2A-H2B)-DNA] antibodies.
Mol
Biol Rep 1996
PMID:Autoantibody to the nucleosome subunit (H2A-H2B)-DNA is an early and ubiquitous feature of lupus-like conditions. 911 24
Heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (hnRNP) complexes are major constituents of the spliceosome. They are composed of approximately 30 different proteins which can bind to nascent pre-mRNA. Among these, the hnRNP-A/B proteins form a subgroup of highly related proteins consisting of two adjacent RNA binding domains (RBD) within the N-terminal parts, whereas the C-terminal halves contain almost 50% glycine residues. These proteins, in particular A2/RA33, are targeted by autoantibodies from patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), and mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD). In SLE anti-hnRNP antibodies frequently occur together with antibodies to U1 small nuclear RNP (U1-snRNP) and Sm, other proteins of the spliceosome. Preliminary epitope mapping studies have revealed major antibody binding sites in the RNA binding regions for all three diseases. Nevertheless, there is some indication of disease specific epitope recognition. Studies in animal models have demonstrated anti-RA33/hnRNP-A/B antibodies in
lupus
-prone mouse strains. Thus, autoantibodies to the spliceosomal hnRNP-A/B proteins are a common feature of RA, SLE, and MCTD. However, these diseases differ in their reactivities to other spliceosomal proteins, especially anti-U1 snRNP and Sm. Therefore, anti-RA33/hnRNP-A/B autoantibodies are not only valuable diagnostic markers but may also allow additional insights into the pathogenesis of rheumatic autoimmune diseases.
Mol
Biol Rep 1996
PMID:Clinical and immunological aspects of autoantibodies to RA33/hnRNP-A/B proteins--a link between RA, SLE and MCTD. 911 25
The La, Ro, Sm and RNP autoantigens have been intensely studied over the past decade since cDNAs encoding autoantigens have been available. Most of these autoantigens are closely associated with RNA in RNP particles and molecular studies have provided insights into their modes of recognition and binding to RNA. For example, a common RNA Recognition Motif (RRM) was found to be a critical component of the RNA-binding domain of these autoantigens and the three dimensional structure of the RRM has been solved. As described in other articles in this series, the presence of La, Ro, Sm and RNP autoantibodies correlates with disease subsets, such as Sjogren's syndrome, systemic
lupus
erythematous and other connective tissue diseases. Immunological analysis of sera from autoimmune patients using recombinant autoantigens has revealed that multiple epitopes reside along the proteins and these represent both continuous and discontinuous (conformational) autotopes. Findings to date support a model of autoantibody induction which involves the direct presentation of proteinaceous autoantigens to the immune system. Circumstantial evidence has suggested that immunological crossreactivity between systemic autoantigens and structural components of infectious agents may play an initial role in the autoimmune response to certain antigens. However, the etiology of autoimmune diseases is probably multifactoral with genetic and other immune features acting on the organismal level. In addition, RNA molecules themselves can be autoantigens with higher order structural conformations which are recognized by RNP-type autoantibodies. Immune crossreactivity and/or direct presentation may generate autoantibodies reactive with conformational RNA epitopes. If crossreactivity with components of cellular or infectious agents give rise to RNA epitopes, they may represent structural or functional mimetics of the primary epitopes that actually drive the response. These ideas are discussed with respect to the role of mimetic processes in molecular recognition during autoimmunity.
Mol
Biol Rep 1996
PMID:RNA recognition by autoantigens and autoantibodies. 911 26
The major cellular antigens recognized by autoantibodies in SLE and other systemic autoimmune diseases have been identified and characterized over the past 25 years. The pioneering studies of Eng Tan demonstrate the importance of autoantibodies as diagnostic markers. However, why certain autoantibodies, such as anti-Sm, are pathognomonic of SLE, while others are markers of other autoimmune disease subsets, remains unanswered. This central question continues to drive much current research into the pathogenesis of SLE. Features of the autoantigens recognized by autoantibodies may provide important clues to the causes of
lupus
. Most autoantigens in systemic autoimmunity are multicomponent nucleoprotein complexes. These particles are encountered by the immune system as units, resulting in the tandem production of autoantibodies recognizing several components of the same complex. However, the intermolecular-intrastructural spreading of autoimmunity is regulated by mechanisms that at present are defined poorly. Also unexplained is the observation that the antigenic determinants recognized by autoantibodies are restricted and frequently correspond to active sites or functional domains. Analysis of experimental models of autoimmunity suggests that altering the structure of autoantigens, due to abnormal protein-protein interactions, hapten binding, altered degradation, or other mechanisms, could help to explain both the restricted patterns of autoantibody spreading and the selective targeting of antigenic sites. This may be a worthwhile area for further investigation of the pathogenesis of systemic autoimmune diseases.
Mol
Biol Rep 1996
PMID:Features of autoantigens. 911 32
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