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Human monoclonal antibodies demonstrate polyreactivity for histones and the cytoskeleton.
Authors:B J Miller  J D Pauls  M J Fritzler
Affiliation:Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Abstract:Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and other autoimmune diseases are characterized by immune responses to intracellular, highly conserved antigens such as DNA and histone. In this study, peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) from a patient with histone autoantibodies were used to prepare IgM human-human hybridoma cell lines. Indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) was used to identify monoclonal antibodies that bound to cytoskeletal and other cytoplasmic constituents. These supernatants did not bind double-stranded or single-stranded DNA. However, immunoblotting revealed that 7/20 hybridomas selected for their binding to cytoskeletal components produced antibodies that also bound mammalian and avian histones. When peptide fragments of histone were used in immunoblotting experiments, it was found that the monoclonal antibodies bound to the carboxyl terminus of H1, a region previously shown to bind autoantibodies from sera of patients with SLE and drug-induced lupus (DIL). When the amino acid sequences of histones and cytoskeletal components were compared using the Swiss-Prot protein data bank, it was confirmed that there are eight regions of similarity. While the significance of polyreactive human monoclonal antibodies to cytoskeletal components and histones is not understood at present, it is possible that the human histone antibodies represent polyreactive antibodies that arise through the mechanism of molecular mimicry.
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