| Literature DB >> 27368807 |
Mandy Sowa1, Rico Hiemann2, Peter Schierack2, Dirk Reinhold3, Karsten Conrad4, Dirk Roggenbuck5,6.
Abstract
Occurrence of autoantibodies (autoAbs) is a hallmark of autoimmune diseases, and the analysis thereof is an essential part in the diagnosis of organ-specific autoimmune and systemic autoimmune rheumatic diseases (SARD), especially connective tissue diseases (CTDs). Due to the appearance of autoAb profiles in SARD patients and the complexity of the corresponding serological diagnosis, different diagnostic strategies have been suggested for appropriate autoAb testing. Thus, evolving assay techniques and the continuous discovery of novel autoantigens have greatly influenced the development of these strategies. Antinuclear antibody (ANA) analysis by indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) on tissue and later cellular substrates was one of the first tests introduced into clinical routine and is still an indispensable tool for CTD serology. Thus, screening for ANA by IIF is recommended to be followed by confirmatory testing of positive findings employing different assay techniques. Given the continuous growth in the demand for autoAb testing, IIF has been challenged as the standard method for ANA and other autoAb analyses due to lacking automation, standardization, modern data management, and human bias in IIF pattern interpretation. To address these limitations of autoAb testing, the CytoBead® technique has been introduced recently which enables automated interpretation of cell-based IIF and quantitative autoAb multiplexing by addressable microbead immunoassays in one reaction environment. Thus, autoAb screening and confirmatory testing can be combined for the first time. The present review discusses the history of autoAb assay techniques in this context and gives an overview and outlook of the recent progress in emerging technologies.Entities:
Keywords: Autoimmune disease; Digital fluorescence; Indirect immunofluorescence; Multiplex diagnostics; Second-generation autoantibody testing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27368807 PMCID: PMC5502073 DOI: 10.1007/s12016-016-8574-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Rev Allergy Immunol ISSN: 1080-0549 Impact factor: 8.667
Fig. 1Evolving autoantibody (autoAb) testing and strategies for the serological diagnosis of systemic autoimmune rheumatic diseases. ANA antinuclear antibody, autoAb autoantibody, CIE counterimmunoelectrophoresis, D/LIA dot/line immunoassay, ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, ENA extractable nuclear antigen, IB immunoblot/westernblot, ID/DRID immunodiffusion/double radial immunodiffusion, IIF indirect immunofluorescence, IP immunoprecipitation, MIA microbead immunoassay, RIP radioimmunoprecipitation
Autoantibody (AAB) detection methods in routine diagnostics of systemic rheumatic diseases
| Method | Principle | Advantages | Disadvantages | Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chip technique (Spot immunoassay) [ | autoAb binding to purified native or recombinant proteins immobilized as a spot on an adsorbent membrane, measurement: see ELISA | •More autoAb per test detectable compared to DIA/LIA | •Optimal epitope presentation for each autoantigen difficult to achieve | Multiparametric determination of autoAb |
|
| In situ autoAb binding to kinetoplast DNA of | High diagnostic specificity for SLE | •Low diagnostic sensitivity for SLE | Determination of dsDNA autoAb in suspicion of SLE or in sera with homogeneous ANA pattern |
| DIA/LIA [ | autoAb binding to purified native or recombinant proteins immobilized as dot or line on an adsorbent membrane, measurement: see ELISA | •Allows the specific detection of numerous autoAb per test including vary rare autoAb | •Qualitative or semi-quantitative analyses only | Multiparametric determination of autoAb (e.g., myositis or SSc specific autoAb) |
| Double radial immunodiffusion (Ouchterlony technique) [ | Precipitation of the autoAb with the corresponding soluble autoantigen in gel after radial immunodiffusion; determination of autoAb specificity by reference antibodies | High diagnostic specificity for CTD | •Low diagnostic sensitivity for CTD | Screening for autoAb against ENA in serum of patients with suspected CTD |
| ELISA [ | autoAb binding to solid-phase (multiwell plate) immobilized autoantigen, measurement of autoAb interaction by enzyme-labeled anti-human IgG (or IgA, or IgM): colorimetry by substrate conversion with proportional behaviour to the strength of immune reaction | •Versatile and sensitive analytical technique | Interferences may lead to false positive reactions (cross-reactive autoAb, matrix effects, endogenic proteins, nonspecific binding, autoAb against blocking proteins) | Specific determination of autoAb (highly purified native or recombinant autoantigens are required) |
| Farr radioimmunoassay [ | Precipitation of anti-dsDNA/DNA complexes; Measurement of the quantity of dsDNA autoAb by using radioactively labeled dsDNA | •High diagnostic specificity for SLE | •Requires radioactive material | Specific detection and quantification of dsDNA autoAb |
| IIF on HEp-2 cells [ | In situ autoAb binding to antigens of HEp-2 cells, visualization of autoAb binding by fluorescence molecule labeled anti-human IgG | •High sensitive detection of most clinically relevant nonorgan-specific autoAb | •Subjective assessment | autoAb screening in sera of patients suspected of having SARD or autoimmune liver disease |
| Microparticle based immunoassays [ | autoAb bind to antigens immobilized on beads; measurement by flow cytometry (suspension bead assay) or optical microscope (planar bead assay) | •More autoAb per test detectable compared to DIA/LIA | •Possible interferences (see ELISA) may lead to false-positive reactions | Multiparametric determination of autoAb |
| Passive agglutination (Latex test: RF) [ | Binding of RF to human IgG bound on the surface of biologically inactive latex particles leads to visible agglutination of the particles | •Easy to perform | •Qualitative or semi-quantitative analyses only | Screening for RF (only rarely used in routine diagnostic since introduction of CCP autoAb) |
| Passive hemagglutination (Waaler-Rose test: RF) [ | Binding of soluble autoantigens coated on red blood cells leads to visible erythrocyte agglutination | •Easy to perform | •Qualitative or semi-quantitative analyses only | Not used anymore in routine diagnostics (in the past used for detection of RF, dsDNA, and Sm/RNP autoAbs) |
| Radioimmuno-precipitation assay [ | autoAb binding to autoantigens of radiolabelled cell extracts; analyses of bound antigens by autoradiography after gel electrophoresis of the immunoprecipitates | Allows the detection of numerous autoAb without purification of autoantigens | •Requires radioactive material | Not used in routine practice; may be used for assay comparison and to search for novel autoAb (specialized labs only) |
| Westernblot (Immunoblot) [ | autoAb binding to electrophoretically separated proteins transferred to adsorbent membrane, measurement: see ELISA | Allows the detection of numerous autoAb without purification of autoantigens | •False-negative results due to destroyed (denaturation of proteins during electrophoresis) or masked epitopes | Not used anymore in routine diagnostics; may be used to search for novel autoAb |
| Nephelometry [ | The amount of antigen/antibody complexes were measured by light scatter | •Easy to perform | •No discrimination between isotypes | Quantification of RF |
ANA antinuclear antibody, autoAb autoantibody, CCP cyclic citrulinated peptide, CTD connected tissue disease, DIA/LIA dot/line immunoassay, ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, ENA extractable nuclear antigen, IIF indirect immunofluorescence, RF rheumatoid factor, SARD systemic autoimmune disease, SLE systemic lupus erythematosus, SSc systemic sclerosis
Fig. 2Multiplexing strategy of CytoBead® technology exemplified for CytoBead® ANA assay. Combination of ANA screening with HEp-2 cells (middle part) and anti-ENA testing with antigen-coated microbeads (peripheral parts I–IV) in one reaction environment. Example of an ANA positive serum with positive homogeneous fluorescence pattern on HEp-2 cells and positive signal on dsDNA-coated microbeads presented as green fluorescence halo (small red microbeads in part III). ANA antinuclear antibody, CENP centromere protein, Da Dalton, dsDNA double-stranded DNA, ENA extractable nuclear antigen, hom homogeneous, RNP ribonuclear protein, Scl-70 DNA-Topoisomerase I, Sm Smith, SS Sjögren-Syndrome, (+) positive, (−) negative
Fig. 3CytoBead® assays for the detection of a antinuclear antibodies (ANA) with CytoBead® ANA assay, b antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies (ANCA) with CytoBead® ANCA assay, and c celiac disease (CD)-specific (auto)antibodies (auto/Abs) with CytoBead® CeliAK assay. Matching principle of specific fluorescence patterns on HEp-2 cells (a), neutrophil granulocytes (b), and esophagus tissue (c) with positive reactions of antigen-coated microbeads immobilized in peripheral compartments. CENP centromere protein, Da Dalton, dsDNA double-stranded DNA, EmA endomysial antibody, GBM glomerular basement membrane, MPO myeloperoxidase, PR3 proteinase 3, RNP ribonuclear protein, Scl-70 DNA-Topoisomerase I, Sm Smith, SS Sjögren-Syndrome, (+) positive, (−) negative