The isolation of a marker antigen from rat liver and pancreas tissue, which reacts with antibodies in a subtype of autoimmune hepatitis by complement fixation test, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and Western blot, is described. The liver-pancreas antigen could be detected in tissue from different human or animal organs, but liver and pancreas yielded the highest activity. A highly specific antigen fraction was obtained by gel filtration and ion exchange chromatography with a 100,000 g supernatant from rat liver tissue, and this preparation was shown to be devoid of nuclear, mitochondrial and microsomal antigens and cytokeratin 8 and 18, as demonstrated by appropriate marker antibodies. These data and absorption studies with cell organelles indicate that liver-pancreas antigen is a cytosolic protein. By Western blotting, two major epitopes at molecular weights 52 kD and 48 kD could be visualized. Sera from 175 patients previously shown to have high complement-fixing activity to a nonpurified liver-pancreas antigen fraction were further analyzed. All were positive by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay with the purified liver-pancreas antigen fractions, and 111 were also positive by Western blot. Eighty-six sera reacted with the 52-kD determinant, 33 with the 48-kD determinant and 2 with both determinants. In 117 of the 175 patients, antibody to liver-pancreas antigen was associated with other autoantibodies known to characterize subgroups of autoimmune hepatitis. Thus 19 patients had antibodies to nuclei and 96 to actin but none to liver-kidney microsomes, hereby suggesting that antibody to liver-pancreas antigen may define another subgroup of autoimmune hepatitis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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