| Literature DB >> 31798588 |
Paul E Gray1,2, Hugh McCarthy3, Owen M Siggs4, Moin A Saleem5, Tracy O' Brien2,6, Katie Frith1, John B Ziegler1,2, A Richard Kitching7, Agnes B Fogo8,9,10, Billy G Hudson9,10,11, Vadim Pedchenko10.
Abstract
Background: Goodpasture's disease (GP) is mediated by autoantibodies that bind the glomerular and alveolar basement membrane, causing rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis with or without pulmonary hemorrhage. The autoantibodies bind neoepitopes formed upon disruption of the quaternary structure of α345NC1 hexamer, a critical structural domain of α345 collagen IV scaffolds. Hexamer disruption leads to a conformational changes that transitions α3 and α5NC1 subunits into immunogens, however, the trigger remains unknown. This contrasts with another anti-GBM disease, Alports' post-transplant nephritis (APTN), where the pathogenic alloantibody binds directly to native NC1 hexamer. The current report includes the first study of antigenic specificity and allo-incompatability in anti-GBM disease occurring after allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT).Entities:
Keywords: Goodpastures; GvHD; alloimmunity; anti-GBM; autoimmunity; conformeropathy; glomerular basement membrane
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31798588 PMCID: PMC6868084 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.02659
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1(A) Kidney lesions in post-HSCT patient showing characteristic features of crescentic glomerulonephritis, with >90% of the 32 glomeruli sampled displaying cellular or fibrocellular crescents, with segmental fibrinoid necrosis and with extensive acute tubular injury and focal, 10–20% interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy (Jones' silver stain). (B–E) Binding of patient serum antibodies to frozen sections from normal human kidney (immunofluorescent staining). (B) Distinct linear staining of GBM observed on intact kidney section, which is strongly increased after pre-treatment with acidic urea (C). (D) There is no staining with normal human serum (1:50). (E) GBM staining was abolished by adsorption of patient serum on α3NC1-coated magnetic beads (E), which removed 95% of α3-antibody as demonstrated by testing of original (GP) and absorbed (MB) serum using indirect ELISA of on α3NC1-coated plate (F).
Figure 2(A) Testing of NC1 domain specificity at the onset of the disease by ELISA showed that antibodies targeted predominantly α3NC1 domain with a lesser reactivity to α1 and α5NC1 domains. (B) Patient serum was pre-incubated with increasing concentrations of the α1, α3, and α5NC1 monomers and binding to corresponding immobilized monomers was measured by ELISA. Differential sensitivity to inhibition by the three NC1 monomers indicates that α3 antibodies has the highest affinity. (C) Pre-adsorption of patient serum with α3NC1-coated magnetic beads (MBser) significantly reduced immunoreactivity to α1 and α5NC1 monomers compared to original serum (GPser). (D) α3NC1-specific antibodies predominantly target the EA epitope with lower reactivity to EB epitope. (E) Binding of purified GP antibody labeled with biotin to α3NC1 monomer was competed by patient serum (Pt), as well as control serum mix from 8 GP patients (GP), but not by the normal human serum (N). (F) Patient's antibodies strongly react with the denatured NC1 hexamers from bovine (bGBM) or human (hGBM) glomerular basement membrane, while minimally react with native NC1 hexamers. (G) ELISA analysis of serial serum samples demonstrated the absence of anti-GBM antibodies 5 weeks prior to presentation (12/30/2013) by comaprison with normal human serum (NHS), with a rapid and strong development of immunoreactivity in 5 weeks. (H) There was no IgM binding to any of the six human recombinant NC1 domains of collagen IV in serum samples collected before or at the onset of the disease. The dashed line indicates threshold determined as mean ± 3x SEM for normal human serum.
Missense variants in genes encoding collagen IV chains.
| g.2,228163453,C,A | COL4A3 | 4.7% | rs57611801 | Asp1269Glu | 45 |
| g.2,228121101,G,T | COL4A3 | 16.7% | rs55703767 | Asp326Tyr | 160 |
| g.2,227946893,C,G | COL4A4 | 2.8% | rs1800516 | Gly545Ala | 60 |
| g.2,227915832,G,A | COL4A4 | 52% | rs1800517 | Pro1004Leu | 98 |
The gnomAD (r2.0.2) allele frequency (AF) reflects that these are common variants, however the Grantham scores (range 5–215) reveal that in particular rs55703767 (radical change), might be expected to impose a significant effect on the physicochemical properties of the α3 chain of collagen IV. MAF, minor allele frequency.
Figure 3Patient-restricted coding variants within type IV collagen proteins. Domain architecture and relative locations of missense variants within COL4A3 (Uniprot: Q01955) and COL4A4 (Uniprot: P53420) proteins that differed between the patient and the cord-blood donor. No patient-restricted variants were observed in COL4A5. The black bars represent anti-GBM disease-associated EA-α3 and EB-α3 epitopes.