Sera from patients with rheumatic diseases recognize different epitope regions on the 52-kD Ro/SS-A protein.

2008 
SUMMARY Patients suffering from systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) or Sjogren's syndrome (SS) often contain autoantibodies directed to the Ro(SS-A) complex. In this study the antigcnic determinants on two of the components of the Ro complex, i.e. the Ro60 and the Ro52 polypeptides, were investigated. Anti-Ro+ sera were selected by counter-immunoelectrophoresis. Depending on the detection method. 59–68% of the SLE patients produced anti-Ro but not anti-La antibody, while 72–81 % of the SS patients produced both anti-Ro and anti-La antibody. Immunoprecipitation of recombinant Ro-proteins showed that 61 sera (87%) were reactive with both Ro proteins, seven sera with Ro60 only, one serum with Ro52 only, and one serum did not precipitate the proteins at all. The anti-Ro60 reactivity of human sera is strongly associated with the native form of Ro60. suggesting that conformational autoepitopes are an important feature of Ro60. In the case of Ro52, frequently the residues located between amino acids 216 and 292 were essential for reactivity with the antibodies. With 70% of the lupus sera tested this appeared to be the only region important for reactivity. The antibodies of SS patients generally recognized multiple B cell epitopes located between amino acids 55 and 292. The results of this study indicate that the antigenic determinants on Ro52 are different for autoantibodies produced by lupus patients compared with those of SS patients.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    31
    References
    51
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []