Transketolase and 2â²,3â²-Cyclic-nucleotide 3â²-Phosphodiesterase Type I Isoforms Are Specifically Recognized by IgG Autoantibodies in Multiple Sclerosis Patients
The presence of autoantibodies in multiple sclerosis (MuS) is well known, but their target antigens have not been clearly identified. In the present study, IgG autoreactivity to neural antigens of normal human white matter separated by bidimensional electrophoresis was assessed in serum and cerebros...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Molecular & cellular proteomics 2008-12, Vol.7 (12), p.2337 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The presence of autoantibodies in multiple sclerosis (MuS) is well known, but their target antigens have not been clearly
identified. In the present study, IgG autoreactivity to neural antigens of normal human white matter separated by bidimensional
electrophoresis was assessed in serum and cerebrospinal fluid of 18 MuS and 20 control patients. Broad IgG autoreactivity
was detected by two-dimensional immunoblotting in all cases to neural antigens, most of which were identified by mass spectrometry.
The comparative analysis of MuS and non-MuS reactive spots showed that a restricted number of neural protein isoforms were
specifically recognized by MuS IgG. Almost all MuS patients had cerebrospinal fluid IgG directed to isoforms of one of the
oligodendroglial molecules, transketolase, 2â²,3â²-cyclic-nucleotide 3â²-phosphodiesterase type I, collapsin response mediator
protein 2, and tubulin β4. Interestingly 50% of MuS IgG recognized transketolase, which was mostly localized on oligodendrocytes
in human white matter from normal and MuS samples. IgG autoreactivity to cytoskeletal proteins (radixin, sirtuin 2, and actin-interacting
protein 1) was prevalent in secondary progressive MuS patients. Among the proteins recognized by serum IgG, almost all MuS
patients specifically recognized a restricted number of neuronal/cytoskeletal proteins, whereas 2â²,3â²-cyclic-nucleotide 3â²-phosphodiesterase
type I was the oligodendroglial antigen most frequently recognized (44%) by MuS seric IgG. Our immunomics approach shed new
light on the autoimmune repertoire present in MuS patients revealing novel oligodendroglial and/or neuronal putative autoantigens
with potential important pathogenic and diagnostic implications. |
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ISSN: | 1535-9476 1535-9484 |
DOI: | 10.1074/mcp.M700277-MCP200 |