Literature DB >> 7861004

Autoantibodies from patients with cicatricial pemphigoid target different sites in epidermal basement membrane.

H Shimizu1, T Masunaga, A Ishiko, K Matsumura, T Hashimoto, T Nishikawa, N Domloge-Hultsch, Z Lazarova, K B Yancey.   

Abstract

Indirect immunogold electron microscopy studies of cryofixed, freeze-substituted, and post-embedded normal human skin were performed to localize precisely the ultrastructural binding site of circulating autoantibodies from two groups of patients with cicatricial pemphigoid. One group of patients had circulating IgG autoantibodies that bound the dermal side of 1 M NaCl-split skin and immunoprecipitated epiligrin. The other group of patients had circulating IgG autoantibodies directed against the epidermal side of 1 M NaCl-split skin and showed no specific reactivity to any keratinocyte polypeptide by immunoprecipitation. IgG autoantibodies from all patients with anti-epiligrin cicatricial pemphigoid bound the lowermost aspect of the lamina lucida at its interface with the lamina densa; the greatest staining was seen beneath and beside hemidesmosomes. In contrast, IgG from cicatricial pemphigoid patients whose autoantibodies bound the epidermal side of 1 M NaCl-split skin localized to hemidesmosomes and the junction between hemidesmosomes and the plasma membranes of basal keratinocytes. Although the latter staining pattern is similar to that observed with anti-BPAG2 autoantibodies, sera from our patients with cicatricial pemphigoid did not bind BPAG2 in immunoprecipitation studies of radiolabeled human keratinocyte extracts or show immunoblot reactivity to a fusion protein corresponding to the immunodominant epitope of this polypeptide. These studies demonstrate the following: 1) Autoantibodies from patients with anti-epiligrin cicatricial pemphigoid consistently bind the lower lamina lucida at its interface with the lamina densa; and 2) other patients with the same phenotype may have IgG autoantibodies against yet-unknown epitopes in basal keratinocytes.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7861004     DOI: 10.1111/1523-1747.ep12665840

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Invest Dermatol        ISSN: 0022-202X            Impact factor:   8.551


  4 in total

Review 1.  The role of laminins in basement membrane function.

Authors:  M Aumailley; N Smyth
Journal:  J Anat       Date:  1998-07       Impact factor: 2.610

2.  Ocular cicatricial pemphigoid antigen: partial sequence and biochemical characterization.

Authors:  S Tyagi; K Bhol; K Natarajan; C Livir-Rallatos; C S Foster; A R Ahmed
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1996-12-10       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  Passive transfer of anti-laminin 5 antibodies induces subepidermal blisters in neonatal mice.

Authors:  Z Lazarova; C Yee; T Darling; R A Briggaman; K B Yancey
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  1996-10-01       Impact factor: 14.808

4.  Molecular diagnosis of anti-laminin 332 (epiligrin) mucous membrane pemphigoid.

Authors:  Roxana Chiorean; Sorina Danescu; Oana Virtic; Mayson B Mustafa; Adrian Baican; Annette Lischka; Takashi Hashimoto; Yoshinobu Kariya; Manuel Koch; Cassian Sitaru
Journal:  Orphanet J Rare Dis       Date:  2018-07-06       Impact factor: 4.123

  4 in total

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