| Literature DB >> 17879094 |
Lisa Leighty1, Ning Li, Luis A Diaz, Zhi Liu.
Abstract
Bullous pemphigoid (BP) is a subepidermal skin blistering disease characterized immunohistologically by dermal-epidermal junction (DEJ) separation, an inflammatory cell infiltrate in the upper dermis, and autoantibodies targeted toward the hemidesmosomal proteins BP230 and BP180. Development of an IgG passive transfer mouse model of BP that reproduces these key features of human BP has demonstrated that subepidermal blistering is initiated by anti-BP180 antibodies and mediated by complement activation, mast cell degranulation, neutrophil infiltration, and proteinase secretion. This model is not compatible with study of human pathogenic antibodies, as the human and murine antigenic epitopes are not cross-reactive. The development of two novel humanized mouse models for the first time has enabled study of disease mechanisms caused by BP autoantibodies, and presents an ideal in vivo system to test novel therapeutic strategies for disease management.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17879094 PMCID: PMC2064945 DOI: 10.1007/s00403-007-0790-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Dermatol Res ISSN: 0340-3696 Impact factor: 3.017
Fig. 1Proposed mechanism of subepidermal blister formation in humanized NC16A mouse model of BP. Subepidermal blistering is an inflammatory process involved in following steps: a anti-BP180 autoantibodies are injected into NC16A mice; b pathogenic antibodies bind to the pathogenic epitope of BP180 antigen in basal keratinocytes (BK); c the molecular interaction between BP180 antigen and anti-BP180 IgG activates the complement system (C′) as evidenced by BMZ deposition of mouse C3; d C′ activation products C3a and C5a cause mast cells (MC) to degranulate; e MC activation leads to neutrophil (PMN) recruitment; f infiltrating PMNs bind to the BP180-anti-BP180 immune complex via the molecular interaction between Fcγ receptors on neutrophils and the Fc domain of anti-BP180 IgG. Activated PMNs release proteolytic enzymes; g proteolytic enzymes degrade BP180 and other extracellular matrix proteins, leading to dermal–epidermal junction separation; h pathogenic antibody-injected mice develop clinical blisters
In vitro and in vivo evidence of pathogenicity of anti-BP180 antibodies
| System | Antibodies used | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| In vitro | ||
| Human skin section | BP sera | [ |
| Anti-BP180NC16A autoantibodies | [ | |
| Rabbit anti-BP180NC16A IgG | ||
| In vivo | ||
| Wild-type mice | Rabbit anti-murine BP180 IgG | [ |
| Hamster | Rabbit anti-hamster BP180 IgG | [ |
| Humanized BP180 mice | Anti-BP180NC16A autoantibodies | [ |
| Humanized NC16A mice | Anti-BP180NC16A autoantibodies | [ |