Antibodies to Porcine Eye Muscle in Patients with Graves’ Ophthalmopathy: Identification of Serum Immunoglobulins Directed Against Unique Determinants by Immunoblotting and Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay*

1987 ◽  
Vol 64 (3) ◽  
pp. 454-460 ◽  
Author(s):  
ANDREW AHMANN ◽  
JAMES R. BAKER ◽  
ANTHONY P. WEETMAN ◽  
LEONARD WARTOFSKY ◽  
THOMAS B. NUTMAN ◽  
...  
1986 ◽  
Vol 113 (4) ◽  
pp. 514-522 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Miller ◽  
H. Sikorska ◽  
M. Salvi ◽  
J. R. Wall

Abstract. We have tested for antibodies against human and pig eye muscle membrane antigens in the serum of patients with Graves' ophthalmopathy using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Several different membrane preparations were used as source of putative antigen including a 100 000 × g pellet, a pellet depleted of the 100 000 × g (microsome) fraction, and solubilized membranes. With eye muscle membrane pellets there were no significant differences for either serum or immunoglobulins between patients with ophthalmopathy, those with autoimmune thyroid disorders without eye disease, and normal subjects for either human or pig membranes, although tests were positive determined from the upper limit of normal in a few patients with or without eye disease. This was the case regardless of the enzyme-antibody conjugate used, the membrane protein concentration or serum or immunoglobulin dilution. Pre-absorption of tissue fractions, serum, or immunoglobulins, with red blood cells or liver powder, eye muscle membranes or skeletal muscle membranes did not significantly reduce background binding which was often very high, or enhance the difference between patients with ophthalmopathy and normal subjects. It was found that non-specific binding to the plastic surface of the microplates and/or tissue proteins, the presence, in human tissues, of blood-derived immunoglobulins which gave strong reactions in the ELISA, and variable fixation of membrane pellets to the plates were factors which made ELISA unsatisfactory when crude membrane pellets were used as antigen. When eye muscle membranes solubilized with standard agents including SDS, Triton X-100 and deoxycholine were tested, again no differences were demonstrated between patients with Graves' ophthalmopathy and normal subjects. However, when membranes were solubilized with the zwitterionic agent 'CHAPSO' approximately 20% of patients with Graves' ophthalmopathy and smaller proportions of patients with thyroid disease without apparent eye involvement had positive tests with both human and pig eye muscle. While availability of human monoclonal antibodies should soon allow the isolation and purification of soluble eye muscle membrane autoantigens for use in sensitive and specific antibody tests, the ELISA, as presently used with crude tissue fractions, appears too variable and prone to non-specific immunoglobulin-binding for routine clinical use.


1989 ◽  
Vol 121 (5) ◽  
pp. 643-650 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Schifferdecker ◽  
U. Ketzler-Sasse ◽  
B. O. Boehm ◽  
H. B. Ronsheimer ◽  
W. A. Scherbaum ◽  
...  

Abstract. Sera from 41 patients with Graves' ophthalmopathy were investigated for presence of autoantibodies directed against eye muscle preparations using different methods: 1. ELISA with pork eye muscle membrane preparations; 2. Immunoblotting with glycoprotein preparations from human eye muscle; 3. Indirect immunofluorescence with human eye muscle sections. The ELISA was not suitable for detection of specific immunoglobulin binding with sera from patients suffering from endocrine ophthalmopathy. Immunoblotting exhibited only nonspecific binding to some muscle proteins; it could be prevented by pre-adsorption procedures and was not different from the pattern observed with skeletal muscle as antigen. The indirect immunofluorescence technique revealed no binding of Graves' sera to human muscle sections, whereas sera containing antibodies against skeletal muscle bound to eye muscle as well. Thus far, an antigenic structure of eye muscle specific for Graves' ophthalmopathy is not detectable with the methodology used here. The possibility that retroorbital connective tissue may be the main target of the autoimmune process must be considered.


2000 ◽  
Vol 85 (4) ◽  
pp. 1641-1647
Author(s):  
Kazuaki Gunji ◽  
Annamaria De Bellis ◽  
Audrey WU Li ◽  
Masayo Yamada ◽  
Sumihisa Kubota ◽  
...  

Serum autoantibodies against eye muscle antigens are closely linked with thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy (TAO), although their significance is unclear. The two antigens that are most often recognized are eye muscle membrane proteins with molecular masses of 55 and 64 kDa, as determined from immunoblotting with crude human or porcine eye muscle membranes. We cloned a fragment of the 55-kDa protein by screening an eye muscle expression library with affinity-purified anti-55 kDa protein antibody prepared from a TAO patient’s serum. A complementary DNA (cDNA) encoding a novel protein, which we have called G2s, was sequenced on both strands, and its size was 411 bp. The open reading frame of G2s corresponded to a 121-amino acid peptide with a size of 1.4 kb. Using the rapid amplification of 5′-cDNA ends technique we were able to clone an additional 0.3 kb of the protein. G2s did not share significant homologies with any other entered protein in computer databases and had one putative transmembrane domain. Using the 1.4 kb cDNA as probe in Northern blotting of a panel of messenger ribonucleic acids prepared from human tissues, the parent protein was shown to correspond to a large molecule of about 5.8 kb with a calculated molecular mass of approximately 220 kDa, consistent with earlier immunoblot studies performed in the absence of reducing agents. G2s was strongly expressed in eye muscle, thyroid, and other skeletal muscle and to a lesser extent in pancreas, liver, lung, and heart muscle, but not in kidney or orbital fibroblasts. We tested sera from patients with Graves’ hyperthyroidism with and without ophthalmopathy and from control patients and subjects for antibodies against a G2s fusion protein by immunoblotting and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. In immunoblotting, antibodies reactive with G2s were identified in 70% of patients with TAO of less than 3 yr duration, 53% with TAO of more than 3 yr duration, 36% with Graves’ hyperthyroidism without evident ophthalmopathy, 17% with Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, 3% with type 1 diabetes, 23% with nonimmunological thyroid disorders, and 16% of normal subjects. The prevalences, compared to normal values, were significant for the two groups of patients with TAO, but not for the other groups. Tests were positive in 54% of patients with active TAO, 33% with chronic ophthalmopathy, 36% with Graves’ hyperthyroidism, 54% with Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, 23% with type 1 diabetes, and in 11% of normal subjects using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The antibodies predicted the development of the ocular myopathy subtype of TAO in six of seven patients and the congestive ophthalmopathy subtype in seven of eight patients, respectively, with Graves’ hyperthyroidism studied prospectively during and after antithyroid drug therapy. Antibodies reactive with G2s may be early markers of ophthalmopathy in patients with Graves’ hyperthyroidism. Because G2s is expressed in both thyroid and eye muscle, immunoreactivity against a shared epitope in the two tissues may explain the well known link between thyroid autoimmunity and ophthalmopathy.


1989 ◽  
Vol 62 (04) ◽  
pp. 1078-1082 ◽  
Author(s):  
Burt Adelman ◽  
Patricia Ouynn

SummaryThis report describes the binding of plasminogen to fibrinogen adsorbed onto polystyrene wells. Binding was determined by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay. Both glu- and lys-plasminogen bound to immobilized fibrinogen in a dose-dependent fashion. However, more lys- than glu-plasminogen bound when equal concentrations of either were added to immobilized fibrinogen. Plasminogen binding was inhibited by epsilon aminocaproic acid indicating that binding was mediated via lysine-binding regions of plasminogen. Soluble fibrinogen added in excess of immobilized fibrinogen did not compete for plasminogen binding but fibrinogen fragments produced by plasmin digestion of fibrinogen did. Treatment of immobilized fibrinogen with thrombin caused a small but significant (p <0.01) increase in plasminogen binding. These studies demonstrate that immobilized fibrinogen binds both glu- and lys-plasminogen and that binding is mediated via lysine-binding regions. These interactions may facilitate plasminogen binding to fibrinogen adsorbed on to surfaces and to cells such as platelets which bind fibrinogen.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document