We describe a simple and convenient enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the detection of apoptosis in tissue culture. An early event in apoptosis is DNA fragmentation followed by release of nucleosomes into the cytoplasm. Our sandwich assay uses a pair of monoclonal antibodies specific for two nucleosomal epitopes to capture and detect cytoplasmic nucleosomes onto the ELISA plate. Our assay is about 500 times more sensitive than the detection of apoptotic DNA ladder by agarose electrophoresis and is especially suited for the testing of large numbers of samples.
Antinuclear Abs are the hallmark of the autoimmune disease systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). The ability of self reactive autoantibodies to bind to DNA and nucleosomes is partly conferred by an increased number of arginine and asparagine residues in the heavy chain third complementarity determining region. This increased content of cationic residues is primarily the result of unusual VH-D-JH rearrangements, which include D-D fusions and D gene inversions. While self Ag-driven clonal expansion is a major contributor to the production of antinuclear Abs in lupus, we explore in this study the hypothesis that newly emerging B cells from autoimmune mice display more frequently these unusual VH-D-JH rearrangements. To this end, libraries of PCR-generated VH-D-JH junctions from MRL and C3H newborn livers were analyzed. When compared with the C3H controls, D and JH gene usage in MRL junctions suggests a greater frequency of secondary D-JH rearrangements in this strain. Furthermore, B cells from the autoimmune-prone MRL mice have significantly increased numbers of atypical VH-D-JH rearrangements (D-D fusions and D inversions). Therefore, B cells from MRL mice manifest intrinsic defects that could confer an increased propensity to produce unusual VH-D-JH rearrangements early in ontogeny.
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