首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Anti-microsomal antibody (AMA) activity was inhibited in 14 of 16 sera and in all 12 IgG preparations from patients with postpartum thyroiditis following incubation with F(ab')2 fragments from normal polyspecific immunoglobulin for therapeutic use (ivIg). Similar results were observed with sera from seven of seven patients with Graves' disease and five of six patients with autoimmune hypothyroidism. Results of these competitive binding assays and affinity chromatography of AMA IgG on Sepharose-bound F(ab'), fragments from ivIg indicated that AMA antibodies reacted with ivIg through idiotypic-anti-idiotypic interactions. Eight out of 10 IgG preparations from patients with autoimmune thyroid disease also showed inhibition of AMA activity when coincubated with autologous IgM at various IgG:IgM molar ratios. These observations suggest that ivIg can inhibit anti-microsomal antibodies through idiotype-anti-idiotype interactions and that such interactions occur with IgM anti-idiotype antibodies in vivo, providing evidence of a role for idiotypic network regulation in the control of thyroid autoimmunity.  相似文献   

2.
Human thyroid cells in primary culture were used for studies of thyroid cell surface antibodies in patients with thyroid autoimmune disorders. Radioiodinated IgG preparations containing thyroid microsomal antibody (TMAb), thyroid stimulating antibody (TSAb) and/or thyroglobulin antibody (TgAb) were tested for binding to thyroid cells. Binding was observed with radioiodinated IgG from patients with Graves' disease, Hashimoto's thyroiditis and idiopathic myxoedema containing TMAb, irrespective of the presence of TSAb and TgAb, while negative results were obtained with normal IgG. A dose-dependent inhibition of binding to thyroid cells was produced by the addition of the corresponding unlabelled IgG preparations. Evidence for tissue specificity was provided by the absence of binding to human skin fibroblasts used as controls. Preabsorption with human thyroid microsomes completely abolished the binding to thyroid cells of a radioiodinated TMAb positive IgG preparation, while only incomplete removal of the reactivity to thyroid microsomes was produced by preabsorption with thyroid cells. These data suggest that some but not all microsomal antigenic determinants are expressed on the thyroid cell surface. Binding to thyroid cells was also observed with purified TgAb, indicating that thyroglobulin antigenic determinants are present on the surface of thyroid cells. No evidence of binding was obtained with a TSAb positive Graves' IgG preparation with undetectable TMAb and TgAb. Unlabelled IgG preparations containing TMAb from patients with either Hashimoto's thyroiditis or idiopathic myxoedema were shown to inhibit the binding to thyroid cells of radioiodinated TMAb positive Graves' IgG and vice versa. These data indicate that antibodies present in these thyroid autoimmune disorders share common thyroid cell surface antigens. However, the binding of radioiodinated IgG from a patient with idiopathic myxoedema was only partially inhibited by Graves' or Hashimoto's IgG, suggesting that some of the thyroid cell surface antibodies of idiopathic myxoedema may not be detectable in other thyroid autoimmune disorders.  相似文献   

3.
Autoantibodies directed against human CD38 (an enzyme catalysing the interconversion of NAD(+) and cyclic ADP-ribose) have been demonstrated recently in patients with type 2 diabetes. We tested 220 consecutive Caucasian patients with autoimmune chronic thyroiditis, 104 patients with Graves' disease, 220 subjects from the general population (control I) and 78 healthy control subjects not affected by thyroid autoimmune disorders (control II) for the presence of anti-CD38 autoimmunity. Using Western blot analysis and optical densitometry, a specific band corresponding to human recombinant CD38 was identified in the serum of several subjects. By defining anti-CD38 positivity as a standardized optical reading > 3 s.d. higher than the mean value of control I, 10.4% of patients with thyroiditis and 7.7% of Graves' patients were anti-CD38 positive (P = 0.0009 versus 1.8% of control I). Similarly, 13.1% of patients with thyroiditis and 10.5% of Graves' patients had a standardized optical reading > 3 s.d. higher than the mean value of the subjects not affected by thyroid autoimmune disorders (P = 0.002 versus 1.2% of control II). Anti-CD38 autoimmunity did not differ between euthyroid, hyperthyroid or hypothyroid patients or between patients with or without thyroid hypoechogenicity. Anti-CD38 autoantibodies were associated with higher levels of circulating antithyroid-peroxidase antibodies (P = 0.03) and they were more frequent in Graves' patients with ophthalmopathy (P < 0.05). Anti-CD38 autoantibodies are a new autoimmune marker in chronic autoimmune thyroiditis and Graves' disease. The specific role of CD38 and its autoantibodies in the modulation of thyroid cell function or growth remains to be investigated.  相似文献   

4.
Rabbit antibodies were raised against Graves' IgG adsorbed onto a TSH-receptor affinity and eluted thereof by [3H]NaCl. The rabbit serum absorbed against normal human IgG (ARI) still bound to Graves', control and Hashimoto's IgG preparations but in the latter two, binding was inhibited by bTSH (10 mU/ml). In addition, ARI stimulated thyroid cell cyclic AMP accumulation in both human and rat thyroid cells. The ARI preparation may, therefore, contain an "internal image" anti-idiotype causing thyroid (Ab2) stimulation, a Graves' disease specific anti-idiotype whose binding with Ab2 inhibits its ability to bind TSH and anti-anti-idiotype (Ab3) to "internal image" Ab2. In further studies, Graves' specific cross-reactive idiotype was found in 10/11 IgGs from patients with active Graves' disease. This study emphasizes the workings of Jerne's immunologic network and the complexity of polyclonal "anti-idiotypic" antibodies.  相似文献   

5.
AIMS: To compare the prevalence of thyroid peroxidase antibodies in 25 children with autoimmune thyroid disorders and in 41 children and young adults with type 1 diabetes, and to test the prevalence of thyrotropin receptor antibodies. METHODS: Two commercially available radioimmunoassays for antibodies to thyroid peroxidase, a commercially available agglutination test of particles coated with thyroid microsomal antigens, and a radioimmunoassay for thyrotropin receptor antibodies were used. Patients and controls were studied. RESULTS: One of the radioimmunoassays detected thyroid peroxidase antibodies not only in all children with autoimmune thyroid disorders and children and young adults with type 1 diabetes and thyroid microsomal antibodies, but also in 20% of healthy control children without microsomal antibodies. With this thyroid peroxidase assay and with microsomal agglutination, 94% of the children with autoimmune thyroiditis, 71% of those with Graves' disease, and over 90% of those with type 1 diabetes and thyroid dysfunction tested positive. In the other radioimmunoassay for thyroid peroxidase antibodies thyroid peroxidase antibody titres in half or more of the children with microsomal antibodies failed to reach the level of positivity given by the producers. Eighty five percent of children with Graves' disease and 71% of those with autoimmune thyroiditis had thyrotropin receptor antibodies but so did 35% of children studied for other endocrinological disorders such as delayed growth or puberty. CONCLUSIONS: Testing patients with well characterised disorders of thyroid function and with other endocrine disorders is important in evaluating the efficacy of new diagnostic tests for thyroid autoantibodies.  相似文献   

6.
The production of interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) by peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), CD4 cells, or CD8 cells in response to interleukin-2 (IL-2) stimulation has been studied; the samples were obtained from 12 healthy control subjects, 19 patients with Graves' disease (10 hyperthyroid and nine euthyroid), 13 patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis (four hypothyroid and nine euthyroid), and 15 patients with rheumatoid arthritis (11 active and four inactive). A dose of IL-2 (25 U/ml) was utilized to induce IFN-gamma by PBMC from all four groups. The incremental increase in IFN-gamma values (with IL-2 stimulation minus without stimulation) was significantly less in PBMC from patients with Graves' disease, Hashimoto's thyroiditis, and rheumatoid arthritis than that in PBMC from control subjects. The values from PBMC in patients with Graves' disease in a euthyroid state were below normal but greater than those from patients with Graves' disease in a hyperthyroid state. The incremental increase in IFN-gamma values from Graves' disease PBMC correlated with the serum TSH values (r = 0.622, P less than 0.01), but not with thyroid autoantibodies (anti-thyroid microsomal antibodies, anti-thyroid microsomal antibodies, nor TSH-binding inhibitory immunoglobulin activities). The incremental increase in IFN-gamma from PBMC from both control subjects and Graves' disease was correlated with that from CD4 cells (r = 0.711, P less than 0.01), but not with that from CD8 cells. The production of IFN-gamma in response to IL-2 from PBMC in Graves' disease correlated inversely with thyroid function, appearing to reflect the very effect of hyperthyroidism in this process. The precise explanation of these phenomena remains unclear. The decreased response of IFN-gamma to IL-2 stimulation by PBMC from patients with Graves' disease, Hashimoto's thyroiditis, and rheumatoid arthritis seems to be a non-specific phenomenon occurring in both organ specific autoimmune disease and systemic autoimmune disease. It may be due to a down-regulation in autoimmune disease of CD4 cells in response to IL-2, a decreased level of IL-2 cellular receptors or a decreased receptor affinity, associated increased soluble IL-2 receptors, or a defect of the intra-CD4 cellular IL-2 signal to produce or release IFN-gamma in the conditions studied.  相似文献   

7.
Serum from a woman with a history of Hashimoto's thyroiditis, who had given birth to two children with congenital hypothyroidism, contained potent TSH blocking activity. Immunoglobulin preparation from this serum abolished completely TSH-stimulated cAMP production in human thyroid membranes. The blocking activity was associated with the IgG fraction absorbed to and eluted from a Protein A column. The stimulation of adenylate cyclase by a preparation of thyroid-stimulating antibodies from a patient with Graves' disease was also inhibited by the antibodies. In contrast, no effect was observed upon fluoride-stimulated cAMP production. The data indicate that the antibody activity was directed against the TSH receptor. Immunoglobulin preparations from 22 other patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis and 16 patients with subacute thyroiditis were examined for the existence of TSH receptor blocking antibodies. A blocking activity was found in two of the 22 Hashimoto patients. No such activity was found in the patients with subacute thyroiditis. It appears that thyroid blocking antibodies sometimes contribute to hypothyroidism associated with Hashimoto's thyroiditis.  相似文献   

8.
Antibodies to the thyrotropin receptor appear to be responsible for hyperthyroidism in Graves' disease. The antibodies, described as thyroid-stimulating antibodies (TSAb) mimic the effects of thyrotropin (TSH) by binding to the TSH receptor and activating adenylate cyclase. TSAb consist of an electrophoretically heterogeneous population of IgG and the thyroid-stimulating site is formed by combination of heavy and light chains in the Fab part of the molecule. Binding studies indicate that the TSAb molecule interacts monovalently with membrane bound TSH receptors and that TSAb consists of an antibody population which shows a restricted heterogeneity with regard to TSH receptor affinity. Studies in patients with Graves' disease and hyperthyroidism indicate that the levels of TSAb correlate well with thyroidal iodine uptake and the absence of pituitary control of thyroid function. However in some patients with ophthalmic Graves' disease or autoimmune thyroiditis there is evidence of serum antibodies which interact with the TSH receptor but are unable to stimulate thyroid function.  相似文献   

9.
Various thyrocyte, monocyte, macrophage, DC and T cell abnormalities exist in the animal models of spontaneously developing autoimmune thyroiditis and in patients with autoimmune thyroid disease. An aberrant interaction between such abnormal thyrocytes, abnormal professional antigen-presenting cells (APC) and abnormal T cells forms the basis for the atypical autoimmune reaction targeting thyroid antigens. In the atypical interaction more than one gene and various environmental factors are involved. The genetic and environmental factors must act together to induce full-blown disease. Although there is a general blueprint for the development of destructive autoimmune thyroiditis, thyrocyte and immune cell abnormalities differ between the various animal models and the various forms of autoimmune thyroid disease (either associated with type 1 diabetes, associated with bipolar disorder or not associated). This tells us that there are different etio-pathogenic forms of destructive autoimmune thyroiditis. Whether such heterogeneity is also the case for the etio-pathogenesis of Graves' disease remains unknown. Animal models of spontaneously developing Graves' disease would be helpful in unraveling this question. If indeed there are various etio-pathogenic routes in different patients that lead to destructive autoimmune thyroiditis, then tailor-made therapeutic approaches need to be carried out in attempts to correct the underlying immune abnormalities in individual patients or to prevent the development of destructive autoimmune thyroiditis in individuals at risk. While in some forms of destructive autoimmune thyroiditis (f.i. those associated with bipolar disorder) immune suppression should be the first choice of intervention, other forms (f.i. those associated with type 1 diabetes) may benefit from immune stimulation in certain pre-stages of the disease (to restore f.i. the faulty APC function characteristic of this condition). Obviously a more precise determination of the spectrum of cell-mediated immune abnormalities is required in individual cases of destructive autoimmune thyroiditis, before therapies that aim at correcting the immune abnormalities can be tested successfully.  相似文献   

10.
Mutations in the tumor suppressor gene, p53, lead to intracellular accumulation of abnormal p53 protein and are associated with p53 autoantibodies. p53 also accumulates in autoimmune diseases and Hashimoto's thyroiditis, but it is unknown if p53 autoantibodies occur in the latter. We measured p53 autoantibodies in the sera of 93 patients with thyroid disease and 19 patients without thyroid disease. Anti-p53 antibodies were detected in the sera from 4.2% (2/48) of patients with autoimmune thyroid disease, including one patient with Hashimoto's thyroiditis (3.7%, 1/27) and one with Graves' disease (4.8%, 1/21). A third patient with pseudohypoparathyroidism, but without thyroid disease, was also positive (1/19; 5.2%). None of 19 patients with differentiated thyroid cancer had anti-p53 antibodies. We conclude that anti-p53 antibodies can be detected in the sera from approximately 4% of patients with autoimmune thyroid disease. This finding suggests that increased DNA damage and apoptosis may be associated with autoimmune thyroid disease.  相似文献   

11.
Thyroid Peroxidase (TPO) is a key enzyme in the synthesis of thyroid hormone and is a major thyroid microsomal antigen corresponding to anti-microsomal autoantibodies in thyroid autoimmune diseases. We studied the autoantigenicity, thyroiditogenicity and gene structure of TPO. In micro-ELISA using human TPO as a target, all sera from patients with anti-microsomal antibodies contained IgG class of antibodies to TPO and some sera had IgM class of antibodies. The competitive inhibition test revealed that TPO is the major thyroid microsomal antigen. Experimental murine thyroiditis was successfully induced by the immunization of porcine TPO. Susceptibility of thyroiditis in each strain was very different from that of thyroiditis induced by thyroglobulin. T-cell line specific for porcine TPO could mediate thyroid lesions. Two kinds of full length cDNAs to human TPO were isolated from cDNA library which was constructed from mRNA purified from thyroid with Graves' disease. The longer one consisted of 3,048 nucleotides and its open-reading-frame was likely to encode 933 amino acids. The shorter one lacked 171 nucleotides at the middle portion of the longer one. The structure-gene for human TPO was located on 2q and consisted of 17 exons. One hundred and seventy-one nucleotides deleted in the shorter cDNA exactly corresponded to the 10th exon.  相似文献   

12.
Heterogeneity of thyroid autoantigens identified by immunoblotting   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Autoimmune thyroid disease in man is commonly associated with autoantibodies against thyroglobulin, microsomes, and the TSH receptor, and the character and specificity of these antithyroid antibodies have been extensively utilized in investigating these conditions. In the present study we have asked whether other thyroid-related antigens exist, against which autoantibodies may be directed. A crude thyroid extract was separated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis followed by immunoblotting with serum obtained from patients with Graves' disease or Hashimoto's thyroiditis. Antibodies in sera from patients with Graves' disease and Hashimoto's thyroiditis reacted with many antigenic determinants in immunoblots of the thyroid membrane preparation (2000g supernatant). These determinants were disease specific in that sera from normals and patients with Addison's disease and rheumatoid arthritis did not react, but there was no difference between the patterns of reactivity with Graves' disease or Hashimoto's thyroiditis sera. Thyroglobulin produced two predominant bands of reactivity at 320 and 200 kDa, whereas purified microsomal antigen produced a triplet of bands around 105 kDa, when these preparations were reacted with appropriate autoimmune sera. Nonetheless, some sera produced additional bands with the microsomal antigen blots, indicating that some of the antigens which were detected using crude thyroid membrane remained in the microsome preparation to produce multiple antibody binding reactivities. We were unable to inhibit any of the antibody binding with TSH. Purification of individual thyroid antigens on the basis of their molecular weights should standardize current antibody assays and permit more detailed evaluation of the cellular immune responses in Graves' disease and Hashimoto's thyroiditis.  相似文献   

13.
《Autoimmunity》2013,46(2):65-72
There is no consensus on the role of antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) in autoimmune thyroid disease; recent reports have suggested that antibodies mediating ADCC are found particularly in patients with primary myxoedema, occur less frequently in Hashimoto's thyroiditis and are absent in Graves' disease. Using an ADCC assay with a single source of effector and target cells, and expressing results as lytic units, we have found antibodies capable of mediating ADCC in 9 of 17 patients with primary myxoedema, 9 of 22 patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis and 6 of 22 patients with Graves' disease. There was no significant difference between the groups in this distribution. Mean levels of ADCC activity were not significantly different comparing primary myxoedema and Hashimoto's thyroiditis patients, although levels were lower in Graves' disease patients compared to those with Hashimoto's thyroiditis (P < 0.05). There was no correlation between TPO antibodies (total IgG or IgG subclasses) measured by ELSA and ADCC activity. These results suggest that thyroid antigens besides TPO are involved in ADCC and that antibodies mediating ADCC are not restricted to subgroups of patients with autoimmune thyroid disease.  相似文献   

14.
Changes in the activity and number of natural killer (NK) cells in peripheral blood in patients with autoimmune thyroid disease were examined. NK activity was measured in a 4-hr 51Cr-release assay and the number of NK cells was analyzed with FITC-conjugated monoclonal antibodies by use of an automated flow cytometer. NK activity in patients with untreated Graves' disease (n = 25, 39.7 +/- 13.5%, P less than 0.05) and Hashimoto's thyroiditis (n = 18, 41.0 +/- 14.2%, P less than 0.05) was high compared to the activity in non-pregnant controls (n = 61, 32.6 +/- 15.0%). NK activity in patients with postpartum Graves' thyrotoxicosis (n = 11, 48.6 +/- 18.9%) was markedly increased compared to the activity in non-pregnant controls (P less than 0.01) and in postpartum controls (n = 29, 33.8 +/- 15.2%, P less than 0.05), although the mean ages of each group did not differ significantly. Moreover, NK activities in the thyrotoxic state were significantly higher than those in the euthyroid state in the same patients with postpartum Graves' thyrotoxicosis or with postpartum destructive thyrotoxicosis. The number of CD16 positive cells increased in patients with postpartum Graves' thyrotoxicosis. However the number of CD16 and CD57 positive cells were normal in all other groups of patients. These results indicate that an increase of NK activity is associated with exacerbation of autoimmune thyroid disease both in Hashimoto's thyroiditis and in Graves' disease and suggest that NK cells might have an important role for the control of disease activity in autoimmune thyroid disease.  相似文献   

15.
A high prevalence of antibodies to double-stranded DNA (AbDNAds) has been recently reported in serum of patients with autoimmune thyroid disorders, but the specificity of this finding has been questioned. For this reason, the prevalence of several antibodies to DNA-related nuclear antigens (AbDRENA) has been evaluated in sera of patients with autoimmune and non-autoimmune thyroid disease. The study group included: 46 Graves' disease patients, 28 Hashimoto's thyroiditis patients, 25 patients with toxic nodular goitre and 11 with non-toxic nodular goitre. Twenty-eight Graves' patients were retested during methimazole (MMI) therapy, and 5 after radioiodine administration. Twenty-two patients with systemic lupus erythematosus and 28 normal subjects served as positive and negative controls, respectively. AbDRENA included: AbDNAds by RIA or immunofluorescence (IF); antibodies to single-stranded DNA (AbDNAss) and antibodies to histone (AbHist) by ELISA methods; antibodies to nuclear antigens (ANA) by immunofluorescence. RIA values were considered to be abnormal when 2 SD above the mean of normal controls. In our study 13% of Graves' patients were positive for AbDNAds by RIA: all of them had negative tests by IF; 11% were positive for AbDNAss, 2% for AbHist and 7% for ANA. A comparable prevalence of positive results for AbDNAds by RIA, with negative IF tests, was found in Hashimoto's thyroiditis patients. No significant changes of antibody levels were observed in Graves' patients during MMI treatment or after radioiodine administration. A positivity for AbDNAds or AbDNAss was found in 8% of patients with toxic nodular goitre, but in none of those with non-toxic goitre.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Terminal complement complexes have been identified around thyroid follicles in Graves' disease and Hashimoto's thyroiditis, and the concentrations of such complexes are increased in the sera of these patients, suggesting a role for complement activation and membrane attack complexes (MAC) in autoimmune thyroiditis. This has been investigated further using cultured human and rat thyroid cells. Thyrocytes were resistant to lysis by homologous complement, in contrast to the effects of heterologous (rabbit) complement. The formation of non-lethal amounts of MAC, using reactive lysis or classical pathway activation, significantly reduced cAMP production by these cells in response to thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) (P less than 0.01); similar effects were seen with thyroid-stimulating antibodies. Thyroid cells were able to recover rapidly from complement attack after washing and incubation for 30 min. Non-lethal MAC formation also resulted in reactive oxygen metabolite production, detected by luminol-dependent chemiluminescence in three out of five thyroid cell preparations tested. Ionomycin, but not TSH, also stimulated reactive oxygen metabolite production. These results suggest that repeated or continuous sub-lethal complement attack on thyroid cells may exacerbate hypothyroidism in Hashimoto's thyroiditis, or partially counter the effects of thyroid-stimulating antibodies in Graves' disease. Furthermore, the production of reactive oxygen metabolites in these circumstances could increase the intra-thyroidal inflammatory response; oxygen radical scavenging by anti-thyroid drugs (which are concentrated by thyrocytes) may account in part for the amelioration of thyroiditis observed with such treatment.  相似文献   

17.
The hyperthyroidism of Graves' disease is thought to be related to antithyrotropin receptor (TSH-R) antibodies. In order to study the degree of immunogenetic homogeneity of these antibodies, we carried out Gm typing of 'receptor-purified' IgG from patients with active Graves' disease and controls. The results were compared to those of serum, total IgG and IgG which failed to attach to TSH-R. We found that in five out of seven Gm heterozygote patients studied the receptor-purified antibodies were restricted to the products of one haplotype compared to three out of five similar controls. Such eluted antibodies were biologically active. Similar results in terms of immunogenetic restriction and activity were obtained when F(ab)2 preparations were used. An unexpected finding was that sera and IgG from normal persons attached to thyroid membranes and that the attachment occurred via F(ab)2. Normal whole serum and 'receptor-purified' IgG and F(ab)2 inhibited TSH binding in the receptor assay; however, this inhibition showed no specificity for TSH-R.  相似文献   

18.
Serum levels of IgG, IgA and IgM were assayed by radial immunodiffusion in 261 patients with eight categories of thyroid disease. These composed eighty-three patients with a first episode of untreated active Graves' disease (toxic diffuse goitre), ten with relapsed Graves' disease, seventeen with thyrotoxicosis due to a multinodular goitre, forty-nine with Hashimoto's thyroiditis, twenty-eight with primary (non-goitrous) myxoedema, forty with non-toxic goitre, eighteen with an adenoma and sixteen with euthyroid ophthalmopathy.

Eighteen (21·7%) patients with a first episode of Graves' disease had abnormally high IgG levels whereas eight (80%) of those who had relapsed after a course of Carbimazole had high levels. Those Graves' disease patients with raised IgG levels had a significantly higher 24-hr radioiodine uptake than those with normal levels. Eight (16·3%) patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis had abnormally high levels of IgG associated with a higher incidence of thyroglobulin autoantibodies. Very few (<6%) patients with primary myxoedema, non-toxic goitre and adenoma had abnormal levels. Euthyroid patients with ophthalmopathy had a significantly lower mean IgG level than the corresponding mean level found in the group with active Graves' disease.

However, despite the differences between groups described above, there were no significant differences of mean IgG, IgA and IgM levels in seven of the eight groups when compared with normal subjects. Only the group with relapsed Graves' disease had a significantly higher mean IgG. None of the patients studied had abnormal IgM or IgA levels.

  相似文献   

19.
Using thyroid peroxidase (TPO), which was purified from the thyroid of patients with Graves' disease, we attempted to determine whether sera from patients with chronic thyroiditis contained antibodies to the enzyme. When the binding was tested by ELISA, sera from patients with chronic thyroiditis revealed high binding activities to TPO. When TPO was incubated with IgG from sera followed by treatment with protein A-Sepharose and centrifugation, the remaining TPO activities in the supernatant fraction were lower in most of the patients, as compared to normal controls. Moreover, IgG purified by DEAE-cellulose chromatography from sera in patients interfered with the TPO activities. Titres of anti-TPO antibodies correlated well with those of anti-microsome antibodies. These results indicate the presence of autoantibodies to TPO in sera of most patients with chronic thyroiditis and that TPO may be one component of microsome antigen complexes recognized by the autoantibodies. Studies on the inhibition of TPO by IgG isolated from sera of patients using guaiacol and iodide assays revealed that at least three epitopes of TPO molecule were recognized by autoantibodies and that the antigenic determinants on TPO molecule recognized by autoantibodies could be heterogeneous in patients.  相似文献   

20.
The clinical significance of a circulating autoantibody against a recently identified soluble human eye muscle-derived antigen was studied in patients with Graves' ophthalmopathy and autoimmune thyroid disorders. Tests were positive in 73% of patients with Graves' ophthalmopathy, including six of seven with no associated thyroid disease (euthyroid Graves' disease). Tests were also positive in 27% of patients with hyperthyroidism but no clinically apparent eye disease, in 13% of patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis without eye disease, in two of 12 patients with subacute thyroiditis, in one of 20 patients with nonimmunological thyroid disorders but in none of 39 normal subjects. There were significant positive correlations between serum levels of the antibody (expressed as a titre) and the severity of the eye muscle component quantified as an index as well as the duration of the eye disease. Antibodies were detected in three of five patients with only lid lag and state who subsequently developed active ophthalmopathy, in six of nine patients who developed eye disease after treatment of their hyperthyroidism and in one of eight first degree relatives of patients with Graves' ophthalmopathy. In addition three of the 12 patients with autoimmune thyroid disease without apparent eye involvement, but positive antibody tests, have developed ophthalmopathy since the time of testing. These findings suggest that tests for antibodies against a soluble human eye muscle antigen may be useful clinically as a diagnostic test and to predict the onset of eye disease in predisposed patients and subjects.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号