| Literature DB >> 27525523 |
Chia-Hao Lin1,2, Chih-Yu Chi1,3,4, Han-Po Shih1, Jing-Ya Ding1, Chia-Chi Lo1, Shang-Yu Wang1,5, Chen-Yen Kuo1,6, Chun-Fu Yeh1,7,8, Kun-Hua Tu1,8,9, Shou-Hsuan Liu1,8,9, Hung-Kai Chen10, Chen-Hsuan Ho10, Mao-Wang Ho3, Chen-Hsiang Lee11, Hsin-Chin Lai2,12, Cheng-Lung Ku1,7,12,13.
Abstract
The binding of autoantibodies (autoAbs) to interferon (IFN)-γ in people with mycobacterial diseases has become an emerging medical concern. Many patients display specific human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II haplotypes, which suggests that a common T cell-dependent and B cell-dependent mechanism might underlie the production of specific anti-IFN-γ autoAbs. We show here that these autoAbs target a major epitope (amino acids 121-131, designated position (P)121-131) in a region crucial for IFN-γ receptor (IFN-γR) activation to impair IFN-γ-mediated activities. The amino acid sequence of this epitope is highly homologous to a stretch in the Noc2 protein of Aspergillus spp., which was cross-reactive with autoAbs from patients. Rats immunized with Aspergillus Noc2 developed antibodies that reacted with human IFN-γ. We generated an epitope-erased variant of IFN-γ (EE-IFN-γ), in which the major neutralizing epitope region was altered. The binding affinity of anti-IFN-γ autoAbs for EE-IFN-γ was reduced by about 40%, as compared to that for IFN-γ1-131. Moreover, EE-IFN-γ activated the IFN-γR downstream signaling pathway ex vivo, irrespectively of anti-IFN-γ autoAbs. In conclusion, we identified a common, crucial B cell epitope that bound to anti-IFN-γ autoAbs in patients, and we propose a molecular-mimicry model for autoAb development. In addition, treatment with EE-IFN-γ might be worth investigating in patients producing anti-IFN-γ autoAbs.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27525523 DOI: 10.1038/nm.4158
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440