“…Several lines of evidence suggest an important role of placental antigens for initiation of the autoimmune response: (1) PG occurs only during pregnancy or in patients with choriocarcinoma and hydatiform mole 8,9 ; (2) No case of vesiculobullous eruption similar to PG has been reported in men with choriocarcinoma (unlike the tumour in women, which develops from gestational tissue with both maternal and paternal antigens represented, choriocarcinoma in men is totally derived from syngeneic tissue) 6 ; (3) Circulating autoantibodies in patients with PG bind to the dermalepidermal junction of skin and amnion 52,53 ; (4) BP180 is present not only in the epidermis but also in the amnion 54 ; (5) Abnormal expression of MHC class II molecules by cells of the amniochorionic stroma has been demonstrated in patients with PG 55,56 ; (6) In cases, in which by chance or altered paternity the mother and the fetus have identical HLA-D phenotypes, unaffected or skipped pregnancies occur 13 . Based on these data, two possible mechanisms for the initiation of an autoimmune response in PG have been proposed.…”