C Romano1, D A Barrett, Z Li, A Pestronk, M B Wax. 1. Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63130, USA.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To explore further the potential role autoimmunity may play in the pathogenesis of normal-pressure glaucoma (NPG) in some patients, the authors examined the sera of patients with NPG for the presence of antibodies directed toward retinal antigens. METHODS: Using patient sera, immunoblotting was performed on subcellular fractions of retina, purified bovine rhodopsin, and immunoaffinity-purified recombinant human rhodopsin. A chemiluminescence-enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to detect anti-rhodopsin antibodies was developed and used. RESULTS: A patient with NPG was found to have a high titer of immunoglobulin M-lambda antibody against a 40-kd retina-specific glycoprotein antigen subsequently identified as rhodopsin. ELISA analysis conducted on sera from 28 patients with NPG and 26 patients with primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) revealed highly significant differences in anti-rhodopsin antibody activity between these groups (P < 0.0002, Mann-Whitney test). For example, the majority of patients with NPG (19/28; 68%) had anti-rhodopsin antibody activity higher than the highest value obtained from among 26 age-matched patients with POAG. CONCLUSIONS: An elevated anti-rhodopsin antibody count is related to NPG. This may indicate that there is an autoimmune component in the optic neuropathy in these patients. The specific role of these autoantibodies, if any, in the pathogenesis of the disease remains to be determined.
PURPOSE: To explore further the potential role autoimmunity may play in the pathogenesis of normal-pressure glaucoma (NPG) in some patients, the authors examined the sera of patients with NPG for the presence of antibodies directed toward retinal antigens. METHODS: Using patient sera, immunoblotting was performed on subcellular fractions of retina, purified bovinerhodopsin, and immunoaffinity-purified recombinant humanrhodopsin. A chemiluminescence-enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to detect anti-rhodopsin antibodies was developed and used. RESULTS: A patient with NPG was found to have a high titer of immunoglobulin M-lambda antibody against a 40-kd retina-specific glycoprotein antigen subsequently identified as rhodopsin. ELISA analysis conducted on sera from 28 patients with NPG and 26 patients with primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) revealed highly significant differences in anti-rhodopsin antibody activity between these groups (P < 0.0002, Mann-Whitney test). For example, the majority of patients with NPG (19/28; 68%) had anti-rhodopsin antibody activity higher than the highest value obtained from among 26 age-matched patients with POAG. CONCLUSIONS: An elevated anti-rhodopsin antibody count is related to NPG. This may indicate that there is an autoimmune component in the optic neuropathy in these patients. The specific role of these autoantibodies, if any, in the pathogenesis of the disease remains to be determined.
Authors: Stephanie A Pumphrey; Stefano Pizzirani; Christopher G Pirie; M Sawkat Anwer; Tanya Logvinenko Journal: Am J Vet Res Date: 2013-04 Impact factor: 1.156
Authors: Louvenia Carter-Dawson; Yujin Zhang; Ronald S Harwerth; Ricky Rojas; Pramod Dash; Xinping C Zhao; Elizabeth WoldeMussie; Guadalupe Ruiz; Alice Chuang; William P Dubinsky; John B Redell Journal: Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci Date: 2009-09-24 Impact factor: 4.799