The results of these novel ELISAs indicated that IgG anti-Dsc autoantibodies were frequently detected and potentially pathogenic in nonclassical pemphigus.
The results of this study indicated that IgE autoantibodies to both BP180 and BP230 are frequently detected in BP sera. IgE anti-BP180 autoantibodies seemed to be pathogenic, while an association between IgE autoantibodies and inflammatory BP phenotype was not indicated.
Paraneoplastic pemphigus (PNP) shows autoantibodies mainly to plakin and desmosomal cadherin family proteins. We have recently identified alpha-2-macroglobulin-like-1 (A2ML1), a broad range protease inhibitor, as a unique PNP antigen. In this study, we tested a large number of PNP sera by various methods. Forty (69.0%) of 58 PNP sera recognized A2ML1 recombinant protein expressed in COS7 cells by immunofluorescence (IF) and/or immunoprecipitation (IP)/immunoblotting (IB). IP/IB showed higher sensitivity than IF. In addition, 22 (37.9%) PNP sera reacted with A2ML1 by IB of cultured normal human keratinocytes (NHKs) under non-reducing conditions. Statistical analyses using various clinical and immunological data showed that the presence of anti-A2ML1 autoantibodies was associated with early disease onset and absence of ocular lesions. Next, to investigate the pathogenic role of anti-A2ML1 antibody, we performed additional functional studies. Addition of anti-A2ML1 polyclonal antibody to culture media decreased NHK cell adhesion examined by dissociation assay, and increased plasmin activity detected by casein zymography, suggesting that anti-A2ML1 antibody may decrease NHK cell adhesion through plasmin activation by inhibition of A2ML1. This study demonstrates that autoantibodies to A2ML1 are frequently and specifically detected and may have a pathogenic role in PNP.
All plakin family proteins are known to be autoantigens in paraneoplastic pemphigus (PNP). In this study, we first examined whether PNP sera also react with epiplakin, another plakin protein, by various immunological methods using 48 Japanese PNP sera. Immunofluorescence confirmed that cultured keratinocytes expressed epiplakin. Epiplakin was detected by 72.9% of PNP sera by immunoprecipitation-immunoblotting with KU-8 cell extract, but not by immunoblotting of either normal human epidermal extract or KU-8 cell extract. Epiplakin was essentially not detected by 95 disease and normal control sera. Statistical analyses of various clinical and immunological findings revealed significant correlation of the presence of anti-epiplakin antibodies with both bronchiolitis obliterans and mortality. No epiplakin-negative PNP case developed bronchiolitis obliterans. However, although 29.4% of European PNP patients had bronchiolitis obliterans, significant correlation with anti-epiplakin autoantibodies was not observed. In further studies for lung, immunofluorescence showed the presence of epiplakin in normal human lung, particularly respiratory bronchiole, immunoprecipitation-immunoblotting showed that PNP sera reacted with epiplakin in cultured lung cells, and mice injected with polyclonal antibody specific to epiplakin histopathologically showed abnormal changes in small airway epithelia. These results indicated that epiplakin is one of major PNP autoantigens and is related to PNP-related bronchiolitis obliterans.Journal of Investigative Dermatology accepted article preview online, 19 October 2015. doi:10.1038/jid.2015.408.
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