Subepidermal blistering associated with the human skin diseases bullous pemphigoid and herpes gestationis has been thought to be an IgG autoantibody-mediated process; however, previous attempts to demonstrate the pathogenicity of patient autoantibodies have been unsuccessful. An immunodominant and potentially pathogenic epitope associated with these blistering diseases has recently been mapped to the extracellular domain ofa human epidermal antigen, BP180. Patient autoantibodies that react with this well-defined antigenic site failed to crossreact with the murine form of this autoantigen and thus could not be assayed for pathogenicity in a conventional passive transfer mouse model. As an alternative, rabbit polyclonal antibodies were generated against a segment of the murine BP180 protein homologous with the human BP180 autoantibodyreactive site and were passively transferred into neonatal BALB/c mice. The injected animals developed a subepidermal blistering disease that closely mimicked bullous pemphigoid and herpes gestationis at the clinical, histological, and immunological levels. Autoantibodies that recognize the human BP180 ectodomain are therefore likely to play an initiatory role in the pathogenesis of bullous pemphigoid and herpes gestationis. (J.
Bullous pemphigoid is a blistering skin disease associated with autoantibodies against the BP180 antigen, a transmembrane component of the hemidesmosome. Anti-BP180 antibodies have been demonstrated to be pathogenic in a passive transfer mouse model. One extracellular site on human BP180 (MCW-1) was previously shown to be recognized by 50-60% of bullous pemphigoid sera. To facilitate the identification of additional autoantibody-reactive epitopes, recombinant forms of the BP180 ectodomain were generated using both bacterial and mammalian expression systems. One recombinant protein, sec180e, that was expressed in COS-1 cells and that contained the entire BP180 ectodomain, provided us with a tool to detect conformational epitopes. Bullous pemphigoid sera immunoadsorbed against the major noncollagenous NC16A domain no longer reacted with sec180e, indicating that autoantibody reactivity to the BP180 ectodomain is restricted to the NC16A region. Immunoblot analysis of bullous pemphigoid sera immunoadsorbed with a series of recombinant NC16A peptides revealed the presence of three novel autoantigenic sites that, along with the MCW-1 epitope, are clustered within the N-terminal 45 amino acid stretch of NC16A. All 15 bullous pemphigoid sera tested reacted with a recombinant protein containing this BP180 segment. No disease-associated epitopes were detectable within the remaining 28 amino acids of NC16A. Thus, bullous pemphigoid patient autoantibodies react with a set of epitopes on the BP180 ectodomain that are highly clustered. This autoantibody-reactive region on human BP180 shows overlap with the corresponding murine BP180 site that is targeted by antibodies that are pathogenic in the mouse model of bullous pemphigoid. These findings suggest new directions for the development of diagnostic and therapeutic tools for this disease.
Bullous pemphigoid (BP) is a blistering skin disease associated with an IgG autoimmune response directed against the ectodomain of the hemidesmosomal protein, BP180. An animal model of BP has recently been developed by our laboratory based on the passive transfer of rabbit antimurine BP180 antibodies into neonatal BALB/c mice. The experimental animals develop a blistering disease that reproduces all of the key immunopathological features of BP. In the present study we have investigated the role of complement in the pathogenesis of subepidermal blistering in the mouse model of BP. We demonstrate the following. (a) Rabbit anti-murine-BP180 IgG was effective in inducing cutaneous blisters in a C5-sufficient mouse strain, but failed to induce disease in the syngeneic C5-deficient strain; (b) neonatal BALB/c mice, pretreated with cobra venom factor to deplete complement, became resistant to the pathogenic effects of the anti-BP180 IgG; (c) F(ab')2 fragments generated from the anti-BP180 IgG exhibited no pathogenic activity in the mouse model; and (d) histologic evaluation of the skin of mice described in points b and c above showed minimal or no neutrophilic cell infiltration in the upper dermis. Thus, anti-BP180 antibodies trigger subepidermal blistering in this BP model via complement activation. This experimental model of BP should greatly facilitate future studies on the pathophysiology of autoantibody-mediated diseases of the dermal-epidermal junction. (J. Clin. Invest. 1995Invest. . 95:1539Invest. -1544
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