Laminin-521 is a Novel Target of Autoantibodies Associated with Lung Hemorrhage in Anti-GBM Disease

2021 ◽  
pp. ASN.2020101431
Author(s):  
Cong-rong Shen ◽  
Xiao-yu Jia ◽  
Wentian Luo ◽  
Florina Olaru ◽  
Zhao Cui ◽  
...  

BackgroundAntiglomerular basement membrane (anti-GBM) disease is characterized by GN and often pulmonary hemorrhage, mediated by autoantibodies that typically recognize cryptic epitopes within α345(IV) collagen—a major component of the glomerular and alveolar basement membranes. Laminin-521 is another major GBM component and a proven target of pathogenic antibodies mediating GN in animal models. Whether laminin-521 is a target of autoimmunity in human anti-GBM disease is not yet known.MethodsA retrospective study of circulating autoantibodies from 101 patients with anti-GBM/Goodpasture’s disease and 85 controls used a solid-phase immunoassay to measure IgG binding to human recombinant laminin-521 with native-like structure and activity.ResultsCirculating IgG autoantibodies binding to laminin-521 were found in about one third of patients with anti-GBM antibody GN, but were not detected in healthy controls or in patients with other glomerular diseases. Autoreactivity toward laminin-521 was significantly more common in patients with anti-GBM GN and lung hemorrhage, compared with those with kidney-limited disease (51.5% versus 23.5%, P=0.005). Antilaminin-521 autoantibodies were predominantly of IgG1 and IgG4 subclasses and significantly associated with lung hemorrhage (P=0.005), hemoptysis (P=0.008), and smoking (P=0.01), although not with proteinuria or serum creatinine at diagnosis.ConclusionsBesides α345(IV) collagen, laminin-521 is another major autoantigen targeted in anti-GBM disease. Autoantibodies to laminin-521 may have the potential to promote lung injury in anti-GBM disease by increasing the total amount of IgG bound to the alveolar basement membranes.

1987 ◽  
Vol 88 (4) ◽  
pp. 419-430
Author(s):  
T. Vartio ◽  
L. Laitinen ◽  
O. Narvanen ◽  
M. Cutolo ◽  
L.E. Thornell ◽  
...  

Monoclonal mouse hybridoma antibodies were obtained for secreted cellular fibronectin (cFn) from A8387 fibrosarcoma cells. One of them, 52-DH1 (DH), reacted exclusively with cFns but not with plasma Fns (pFns) in immunoblotting and solid-phase EIA. The DH antibody also recognized thermolysin cFn fragments and beta-galactosidase-Fn fusion protein which contained the ED sequence specific to at least some forms of cFns. On the other hand, the DH antibody failed to recognize a fusion protein that was otherwise identical but lacked the ED sequence. Thus, the antigenic determinant for the DH antibody was located to the ED sequence. The DH antibody was then used to study the expression of ED sequence containing cFn (EcFn). For comparisons, another monoclonal antibody, 52BF12 (BF), recognizing equally well both pFns and cFns, was used. Immunoblotting of pFn fragments indicated that this antibody had the antigenic determinant at or close to the cell-binding site of Fn. EcFn was revealed by the DH antibody in embryonic and adult fibroblasts and in a variety of other cultured normal and malignant human cells. In embryonic tissues EcFn was abundant in developing basement membranes, as shown in foetal kidney and muscle, while in adult tissues it was confined only to endothelia of larger blood vessels. Furthermore, in embryonic tissues the capillaries showed bright EcFn-positivity not found any more in adult tissues. Human plasma contained a small quantity of EcFn, which may hence have an endothelial origin. EcFn was also prominent in the stroma of malignant tumours as well as in reactive benign conditions, such as granulation tissue and decidual cells. The results suggest that EcFn is a form of the protein which may have a particular role in developing and reactive tissues in embryos and adults.


Antibodies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 18
Author(s):  
Sophia Lionaki ◽  
Smaragdi Marinaki ◽  
Konstantinos Panagiotellis ◽  
Ioanna Tsoumbou ◽  
George Liapis ◽  
...  

Aim: Glomerular diseases (GD) associated with malignancies (AM, GDAM) have unique features, which are important to recognize, in the light of the progress made in cancer therapy. We aimed to describe the clinical and histopathological characteristics of patients with GDAM in relation to the presence of circulating autoantibodies, pointing to potential immune pathogenic pathways connecting cancer to GD. Materials and Methods: The included patients were studied retrospectively on the basis of a kidney biopsy proving GD and a related biopsy to establish the diagnosis of AM. We recorded patients’ demographics, serological and laboratory parameters, histopathological findings, and the type of malignancy, GD, and therapy. Results: In total, 41 patients with GDAM, with a mean age of 63.1 (±10.7) years, were studied. In 28 (68.3%) cases, GD was associated with a solid tumor, and in 13 (31.7%) patients with a lymphoid malignancy. The most frequent histopathological pattern was membranous nephropathy (43.9%). Overall, at the time of GD diagnosis, 17% of the patients were positive for antinuclear antibodies (ANA), and 12.2% for antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies (ANCA), all against myeloperoxidase (MPO). In addition, 93.3% of the patients who had membranous nephropathy were negative for transmembrane glycoprotein M-type phospholipase A2 receptor (PLA2R) antibody. Sixteen patients (39.0%) presented with acute nephritic syndrome, of whom five (31.25%) developed rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis. In a mean follow-up time of 36.1 (±28.3) months, nine (21.95%) patients ended up with end-stage kidney disease, and eight (19.5%) died. Conclusion: We found that 3.2% of patients who underwent a native kidney biopsy in our institution during the past decade, for any reason, were identified as having some type of GD associated with a malignancy. Serology indicated a significant presence of ANA or MPO-ANCA antibodies in patients with nephritic syndrome and the absence of PLA2R antibodies in patients with membranous nephropathy.


2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (Supplement_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenan Turgutalp ◽  
Egemen Cebeci ◽  
Aydin Turkmen ◽  
Ülver Derici ◽  
Nurhan Seyahi ◽  
...  

Abstract Background and Aims In IgA nephropathy (IgAN), which is characterized by mesangial IgA accumulation, there is the formation of circulating autoantibodies against galactose deficient IgA1s (Gd-IgA1). IgG / Gd-IgA1 immunocomplexes accumulate in the glomerular mesangium and play a role in the pathogenesis of IgAN. Recent studies have suggested a relationship between glomerular IgG deposition and the severity of glomerular inflammation. However, detection of the presence and severity of IgG in routine immunofluorescence microscopy (IFM) may fail. This study aims to investigate whether IgG positivity detected by IFM is associated with poor renal prognostic indicators and whether renal prognosis can be predicted according to IgG positivity. Method 4399 patients who were enrolled between May 2009-June 2019 in database of Turkish Society of Nephrology, Glomerular Diseases Working Group (TSN-GOLD) including 44 centers were evaluated. After exclusion criteria, 994 primary IgAN patients were included in the study. Glomerular IgG negative and positive patients were compared by means of Oxford classification scores, histopathological evaluations, proteinuria, creatinine, albumin, blood pressures. IgG positive patients were divided into subgroups according to the grade of the IFM positivity. The relationship between IgG positivity and poor prognosis criteria were evaluated. Results Demographic and biochemical findings of glomerular IgG positive and negative patients at the time of biopsy are shown in Table 1. No difference was found between the groups. There was no difference in the demographic and biochemical findings at the time of biopsy in IgG subgroup analyses (Table 2). There was no difference between the histopathological and Oxford MEST scores of the subgroups. Glomerular IgG positivity was not associated with diastolic blood pressure, systolic blood pressure, urea, uric acid, age, eGFR, albumin, proteinuria (p> 0.05 for all, r= -0.084, r= -0.102, r= -0.006, r=0.062, r= 0.014, r= -0.044, r= -0.061, r= -0.066, r= 0.150, respectively). Conclusion Glomerular IgG positivity detected by routine IFM in IgAN is not associated with poor renal prognostic indicators. It is difficult to predict renal prognosis by looking at the severity of IgG positivity at the baseline evaluation.


2000 ◽  
Vol 191 (5) ◽  
pp. 899-906 ◽  
Author(s):  
Akira Nakamura ◽  
Takae Yuasa ◽  
Azusa Ujike ◽  
Masao Ono ◽  
Toshihiro Nukiwa ◽  
...  

The combination of hemorrhagic pneumonitis and rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis is a characteristic feature of Goodpasture's syndrome (GPS), an autoimmune disease resulting from the interaction of pathogenic anti–collagen type IV (C-IV) antibodies with alveolar and glomerular basement membranes. Lack of a suitable animal model for this fatal disease has hampered both a basic understanding of its etiology and the development of therapeutic strategies. We now report a novel model for GPS using mice deficient in a central regulatory receptor for immunoglobulin (Ig)G antibody expression and function, the type IIB Fc receptor for IgG (FcγRIIB). Mutant mice immunized with bovine C-IV reproducibly develop massive pulmonary hemorrhage with neutrophil and macrophage infiltration and crescentic glomerulonephritis. The distinctive linear, ribbon-like deposition of IgG immune complex seen in GPS was observed along the glomerular and tubulointerstitial membranes of diseased animals. These results highlight the role of FcγRIIB in maintaining tolerance and suggest that it may play a role in the pathogenesis of human GPS.


Development ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 121 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
T.A. Mitsiadis ◽  
M. Salmivirta ◽  
T. Muramatsu ◽  
H. Muramatsu ◽  
H. Rauvala ◽  
...  

Midkine (MK) and heparin binding-growth associated molecule (HB-GAM or pleiotrophin), constitute a new family of heparin-binding proteins implicated in the regulation of growth and differentiation (T. Muramatsu (1993) Int. J. Dev. Biol. 37, 183–188). We used affinity-purified antibodies against MK and HB-GAM to analyze their distribution during mouse embryonic development. From 9 to 14.5 day post-coitum (dpc), both proteins were detected in central and peripheral nervous systems, facial processes, limb buds, sense organs, respiratory, digestive, urogenital, and skeletal systems. MK and HB-GAM were often localized on the surface of differentiating cells and in basement membranes of organs undergoing epithelial-mesenchymal interactions. The level of MK protein decreased considerably in the 16.5 dpc embryo, whereas HB-GAM staining persisted in many tissues. Our in situ hybridization results revealed a widespread expression of MK transcripts that was not always consistent with the distribution of MK protein in developing tissues. In many epithelio-mesenchymal organs MK and HB-GAM were codistributed with syndecan-1, a cell surface proteoglycan. In limb buds and facial processes, MK, HB-GAM, and syndecan-1 were localized to the apical epithelium and the adjacent proliferating mesenchyme. Both MK and HB-GAM bound syndecan-1 in solid-phase assays in a heparan sulfate-dependent manner. The biological effects of MK and HB-GAM on limb and facial mesenchyme were studied in vitro by application of beads preloaded with the proteins. Neither MK nor HB-GAM stimulated mesenchymal cell proliferation or induced syndecan-1 expression. Taken together these results indicate that MK and HB-GAM may play regulatory roles in differentiation and morphogenesis of the vertebrate embryo, particularly in epithelio-mesenchymal organs, and suggest molecular interactions with syndecan-1.


Blood ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 80 (12) ◽  
pp. 3164-3172
Author(s):  
S Karpatkin ◽  
J Xia ◽  
J Patel ◽  
GJ Thorbecke

Serum platelet-reactive and glycoprotein (GP) IIb-GPIIIa-reactive IgG and F(ab')2 was examined in 39 patients with classic autoimmune thrombocytopenic purpura (ATP), two patients with anti-PLA1 antibody and 25 control subjects in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. IgG was purified by diethyl aminoethyl chromatography and centrifuged at 100,000g before testing of the supernatant. Significant IgG binding (threefold to fourfold control IgG binding) was noted with 8 of 17 ATP patients' IgG, 2 anti-PLA1 IgGs, and 2 ATP patients with multiple platelet transfusions. However, F(ab')2 fragments of nine of nine positive ATP IgGs were nonreactive; F(ab')2 from the two anti-PLA1 and two multiply transfused ATP IgGs were as reactive as their intact IgG. Antiplatelet or anti-GPIIb-GPIIIa reactivity of ATP IgG could be adsorbed to fixed platelets or solid-phase GPIIb-GPIIIa and eluted with 0.1 mol/L glycine, pH 2.5. However, binding of IgG to GPIIb-GPIIIa could not be inhibited with F(ab')2 of ATP IgG or Fc fragments of control subjects. When platelet- or GPIIb-GPIIIa-reactive ATP IgG was applied to a Sephacryl 300 gel filtration column, no reactivity was noted in the 7S region, whereas anti-PLA1 localized to this region. Antiplatelet or anti-GPIIb-GPIIIa reactivity was noted in the void volume and accompanied by a high molecular weight protein region. An immunoblot of the void volume fraction with goat antihuman IgG (gamma chain) antibody showed high molecular weight bands greater than 250 Kd, which after reduction converted to a 55-Kd heavy-chain band. Fresh samples of ATP and control IgG processed within 1 to 2 days of blood withdrawal had no reactivity for GPIIb-GPIIIa. After storage at -20 degrees C for greater than 3 months, 5 of 19 ATP IgG became reactive, whereas 16 of 16 controls were nonreactive. Thus, platelet-reactive IgG of ATP sera appears to be caused by the development of IgG aggregates held together by disulfide bonds that develop on storage, and is not F(ab')2 mediated.


2003 ◽  
Vol 48 (3) ◽  
pp. 433-438 ◽  
Author(s):  
Noritaka Oyama ◽  
Jane F. Setterfield ◽  
Matthew J. Gratian ◽  
Balbir S. Bhogal ◽  
Pepe Shirlaw ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. ASN.2020091376
Author(s):  
Pragyi Shrestha ◽  
Saritha Adepu ◽  
Romain R. Vivès ◽  
Rana El Masri ◽  
Astrid Klooster ◽  
...  

BackgroundDyslipidemia is an important risk factor in CKD. The liver clears triglyceride-rich lipoproteins (TRL) via LDL receptor (LDLR), LDLR-related protein-1 (LRP-1), and heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs), mostly syndecan-1. HSPGs also facilitate LDLR degradation by proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9). Progressive renal failure affects the structure and activity of hepatic lipoprotein receptors, PCSK9, and plasma cholesterol.MethodsUninephrectomy- and aging-induced CKD in normotensive Wistar rats and hypertensive Munich-Wistar-Frömter (MWF) rats.ResultsCompared with 22-week-old sex- and strain-matched rats, 48-week-old uninephrectomized Wistar-CKD and MWF-CKD rats showed proteinuria, increased plasma creatinine, and hypercholesterolemia (all P<0.05), which were most apparent in hypertensive MWF-CKD rats. Hepatic PCSK9 expression increased in both CKD groups (P<0.05), with unusual sinusoidal localization, which was not seen in 22-week-old rats. Heparan sulfate (HS) disaccharide analysis, staining with anti-HS mAbs, and mRNA expression of HS polymerase exostosin-1 (Ext-1), revealed elongated HS chains in both CKD groups. Solid-phase competition assays showed that the PCSK9 interaction with heparin-albumin (HS-proteoglycan analogue) was critically dependent on polysaccharide chain length. VLDL binding to HS from CKD livers was reduced (P<0.05). Proteinuria and plasma creatinine strongly associated with plasma cholesterol, PCSK9, and HS changes.ConclusionsProgressive CKD induces hepatic HS elongation, leading to increased interaction with PCSK9. This might reduce hepatic lipoprotein uptake and thereby induce dyslipidemia in CKD. Therefore, PCSK9/HS may be a novel target to control dyslipidemia.


Author(s):  
Marina Johnson ◽  
Helen R. Wagstaffe ◽  
Kimberly C. Gilmour ◽  
Annabelle Lea Mai ◽  
Joanna Lewis ◽  
...  

AbstractBackgroundThe emergence of SARS-CoV-2 has led to the development of new serological assays that could aid in diagnosis and evaluation of seroprevalence to inform an understanding of the burden of COVID-19 disease. Many available tests lack rigorous evaluation and therefore results may be misleading.ObjectivesThe aim of this study was to assess the performance of a novel multiplexed immunoassay for the simultaneous detection of antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 trimeric spike (S), spike receptor binding domain (RBD), spike N terminal domain and nucleocapsid antigen and a novel pseudo-neutralisation assay.MethodsA multiplexed solid-phase chemiluminescence assay (Meso Scale Discovery) was evaluated for the simultaneous detection of IgG binding to four SARS-CoV-2 antigens and the quantification of antibody-induced ACE-2 binding inhibition (pseudo-neutralisation assay). Sensitivity was evaluated with a total of 196 COVID-19 serum samples (169 confirmed PCR positive and 27 anti-nucleocapsid IgG positive) from individuals with mild symptomatic or asymptomatic disease. Specificity was evaluated with 194 control serum samples collected from adults prior to December 2019.ResultsThe specificity and sensitivity of the binding IgG assay was highest for S protein with a specificity of 97.4% and sensitivity of 96.2% for samples taken 14 days and 97.9% for samples taken 21 days following the onset of symptoms. IgG concentration to S and RBD correlated strongly with percentage inhibition measured by the pseudo-neutralisation assay.ConclusionExcellent sensitivity for IgG detection was obtained over 14 days since onset of symptoms for three SARS-CoV-2 antigens (S, RBD and N) in this multiplexed assay which can also measure antibody functionality.


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