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ABSTRACT: Glutathione S-transferase T1 (GSTT1) is a drug metabolizing enzyme abundantly expressed in liver and kidney cells; it is encoded by a single gene that is absent in 20% of the Caucasian population. Our group found that some liver transplantation patients developed de novo immune hepatitis (IH) and that all of them had anti-GSTT1 antibodies. The main objective of this study was to analyze the influence of a GSTT1 mismatch between donor and recipient in the immune response and the outcome of the graft. We confirmed that only under one of the four possible genetic combinations (null recipient/positive donor) is an alloimmune response triggered with production of anti-GSTT1 antibodies. Therefore, we conclude that this genetic mismatch can be considered a risk factor for de novo IH.
Transplantation Proceedings 12/2005; 37(9):3968-9. · 1.00 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The aim of the present study was to determine whether a kidney graft expressing the glutathione S-transferase T1 enzyme (GSTT1) could cause an alloimmune response in a recipient with the null GSTT1 genotype that was similar to that observed in liver transplant. We have found anti-GSTT1 antibodies in the sera of a number of patients and confirmed that only one of the four possible genetic combinations--positive donor/null receptor--could lead to the production of these antibodies. Nevertheless, the main finding of this study is that in kidney transplantation, this mismatch was not sufficient to trigger an immune reaction. Longer follow-up of the posttransplant evolution of the patients is required in order to clarify the contribution of the factors involved in this process.
Transplantation Proceedings 05/2005; 37(3):1457-8. · 1.00 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Pneumocystis infection occurs worldwide, and most individuals test seropositive for Pneumocystis early in childhood. Little is known about the epidemiology of this infection in western Europe. The seroprevalence of Pneumocystis infection in 233 Spanish children was determined in a community study by immunoblot analysis of sera. The overall seroprevalence was 73%, with an age-related increase from 52% at 6 years to 66% at 10 years and 80% at 13 years. The data indicated a high seroprevalence of Pneumocystis infection in healthy Spanish children, thereby demonstrating that this pathogen is widespread in southern Spain.
Clinical Microbiology and Infection 12/2004; 10(11):1029-31. · 4.54 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Autoantibodies against discrete variable-sized dots observed in HEp2 cells by indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) test, called multiple nuclear dots (MND), have been closely associated with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC). Some authors have argued that this antibody is also present in connective tissue diseases or liver diseases other than PBC as autoimmune chronic active hepatitis, particularly of the cholestatic type. We studied an unselected group of patients routinely tested for autoantibodies and positive for the MND pattern and tried to establish the correlation between the presence of this antibody and their diagnosis.
A commercial ELISA test, using a recombinant 26 kD truncated sequence of the Sp100 protein, corresponding to an immunodominant molecular region, was used to assess the clinical correlation of these autoantibodies in 110 patients showing an anti-MND immunofluorescence pattern.
One-hundred-and-ten patients were MND positive by IIF. Of these, 100 were Sp100 positive by ELISA. In the Sp100 positive group, 34 had a diagnosis of PBC (30 definite and 4 suspected) while 15 patients had a non-PBC hepatopathy. Unexpectedly, 13 of the MND/Sp100 positive pattern corresponded to systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients and 5 cases to collagen diseases. Another divergence with previous reports was that 34 of the positive patients showed very heterogeneous clinical pictures, different from hepatopathies or collagen diseases.
Anti-Sp100 antibodies can be found in many clinical conditions. Testing for MND/Sp100 positivity is useful for the diagnosis of PBC, but only when the right clinical context is present. Other diseases cannot be excluded in first line SLE.
Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology 10/2003; 38(9):996-9. · 2.02 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Different genetic mutations have been described in complement component C7 deficiency, a molecular defect which is clinically associated with an increased susceptibility to neisserial recurrent infections, although some cases remain asymptomatic. In this work we report the genetic bases of C7 deficiency in one Spanish family. Exon-specific PCR and sequencing revealed a novel point mutation at nucleotide 615 (exon 6) leading to a stop codon (UGG to UGA) in the patient, his mother, and sister. This transversion causes the premature truncation of the C7 protein (W183X). Additionally, we detected a missense mutation at position 1135 (exon 9) located in the first nucleotide of the codon GGG (CGG), resulting in an amino acid change (G357R) in the patient, his father, as well as in his sister. This latter mutation had been previously described in individuals from Moroccan Sephardic Jewish ancestry. Since both heterozygous mutations were found in the patient as well as in his asymptomatic sister, we analyse other meningococcal defence mechanisms such as polymorphisms of the opsonin receptors on polymorphonuclear cells. Results showed that the patient and his sister bore identical combinations of FcgammaRIIA-H/R131 and FcgammaRIIIB-NA1/2 allotypes. Our results provide further evidence that the molecular pathogenesis of C7 deficiency as well as susceptibility to meningococcal disease are heterogeneous, since different families carry different molecular defects, although many of the C7 defects appear to be homogeneous in individuals from certain geographical areas. The missense mutation G357R would make an interesting topic of analysis with regard to meningococcal disease susceptibility in the Spanish population.
Clinical & Experimental Immunology 09/2003; 133(2):240-6. · 3.36 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Iliopsoas muscle abscess (IPA) is an uncommon condition, and it is usually associated with immunosuppression. Three out of a cohort of 552 patients diagnosed of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) developing an IPA, are reported herein. Patients showed fever and other symptoms related to SLE. They improved only partially under SLE therapy, and showed pain suggestive of IPA. It was confirmed by CT in all cases. S. aureus was isolated in one patient (primary IPA), and M. tuberculosis in the others. Specific antimicrobial therapy and surgical drainage were required. In summary, SLE might be considered as a risk condition for the development of IPA, due to the immunosuppression inherent in the disease and its treatment.
Anales de medicina interna (Madrid, Spain: 1984) 05/2003; 20(4):198-200.
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Transplantation Proceedings 04/2003; 35(2):712. · 1.00 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Four patients of 283 liver-transplant recipients (1.4%) developed de novo immune-mediated hepatitis approximately 2 years after transplantation. Antibodies showing an unusual liver/kidney cytoplasmic staining pattern were detected in the sera of all four patients and one of them was used to screen a human liver cDNA expression library with the aim of identifying the antigenic target of these newly developed antibodies. After cloning and sequencing the gene, it was identified as the gene encoding the glutathion-S-transferase T1 (GSTT1), a 29-kD molecular weight protein, expressed abundantly in liver and kidney. Sera from the other three patients also contained anti-GSTT1 antibodies, two of them demonstrated by immunoblot analysis against the recombinant antigen and the other, which was negative by immunoblot, gave a positive reaction when used directly to screen the same library, suggesting it to be directed to a conformational epitope. The GSTT1 enzyme is the product of a single polymorphic gene that is absent from 20% of the Caucasian population. When we analysed the GSTT1 genotype of the four patients described above, we found that this gene is absent from all of them. Three donor paraffin embedded DNA samples were available and were shown to be positive for GSSTT1 genotype. In accordance with these results, we suggest that this form of post-transplant de novo immune hepatitis, that has been reported as autoimmune hepatitis by others, could be the result of an antigraft reaction in individuals lacking the GSTT1 phenotype, in which the immune system recognizes the GSTT1 protein as a non-self antigen, being the graft dysfunction not the result of an autoimmune reaction, but the consequence of an alo-reactive immune response.
Clinical & Experimental Immunology 01/2002; 126(3):535-9. · 3.36 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Autoantibodies against the transcriptional DEK protein have been considered characteristic of the pauciarticular onset subtype of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA) associated with iridocyclitis in young girls. In this study we investigated the presence of anti-DEK autoantibodies in the sera of 288 patients with SLE using a recombinant DEK protein as autoantigenic target. Thirty sera (10.4%) were positive against DEK protein by immunoblotting. Patients with anti-DEK autoantibodies show a lower frequency of cutaneous manifestation, exhibit more frequently certain markers of a chronic inflammatory status like anaemia and positivity for C-reactive protein, as well as a higher frequency of anti-double-stranded DNA autoantibodies. In contrast to JRA patients positive for anti-DEK autoantibodies, no association with erosive arthritis nor iridocyclitis were found in SLE. In conclusion, our results show that 10.4% of SLE patients from our area show antibodies against DEK protein, although this feature did not clearly establish a clinical subset of the disease.
Clinical & Experimental Immunology 04/2000; 119(3):530-2. · 3.36 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Two human monoclonal autoantibodies, B-33 and B-24, were generated from the B cells of a patient with scleroderma. Both monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) were composed of mu and lambda chains, and recognized cytoplasmic vesicular structures by indirect immunofluorescence on Hep-2 cell line slides, although mAb B-24 showed an additional diffuse cytoplasmic staining pattern. By Western blot, mAb B-24 exhibited a polyreactive-like binding pattern, whereas mAb B-33 failed to recognize any electroblotted Hep-2 antigen. The polyreactive versus monospecific behaviour of mAbs B-24 and B-33 was further confirmed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) with a variety of foreign and autoantigens. The N-terminal sequence of a protein band isolated by affinity chromatography with mAb B-33 was identical to that of cation-independent mannose 6-phosphate receptor (CI-MPR), also known as the insulin-like growth factor type-2 receptor (IGF-2R). Immunofluorescence experiments on Hep-2 cell line slides demonstrated a striking co-localization between the staining pattern exhibited by these mAbs and the pattern obtained using a goat anti-CI-MPR serum, indicating the recognition by B-24 and B-33 of a structure located predominantly in late endosomes. Sequence analysis of the V-region gene segments of B-33 and B-24 showed both to be identical, except for the existence of a point mutation in B-33 located in the H-complementarity-determining region 3 (H-CDR3) (position 100D), which produces a non-conservative replacement of Gly by Ser. This single replacement appears to be responsible for the dramatic change in reactivity of human mAb B-33. The data shown here provide new evidence of the critical role played by the H-CDR3 region in distinguishing a polyspecific from a monospecific antibody. A population study demonstrated the existence of immunoglobulin G (IgG) reactivity against CI-MPR/IGF-2R in serum specimens from five individuals with different pathological conditions, thus indicating that this molecule is a potential target for the human autoimmune response.
Immunology 01/2000; 98(4):652-62. · 3.32 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: We describe 2 women with features of autoimmune cholangitis. Serum biochemical studies showed cholestasis and increased immunoglobulin M with negative antimitochondrial antibodies. Markers of hepatitis B and C viruses were absent. Both had positive antinuclear antibodies. One had a speckled pattern (multiple nuclear dots) and the other a perinuclear pattern (pore nuclear). In the first case anti-Sp100 was positive by EIA and in the second anti-Gp210 was detected by immunoblot. Diagnosis of primary biliary cirrhosis was made and the patients were treated with UDCA. Current knowledge indicates that determination of anti-Sp100 and anti-Gp210 substantially improves diagnosis of primary biliary cirrhosis as these ANA are highly specific for this disease. These autoantibodies may lead to the classification of different groups of patient included in autoimmune cholangitis. All patients with autoimmune cholangitis should be tested for anti-Sp100 and anti-Gp210.
Gastroenterología y Hepatología 02/1999; 22(1):11-3. · 0.73 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The pathogenic role of anti-type II collagen was analysed in a variety of hearing losses, in age-matched controls and in different autoimmune diseases. The immune reactivity of peripheral blood lymphocytes to type II collagen was studied by the degree of proliferation measured as the incorporation of bromodeoxyuridine in cultured lymphocytes. The anti-type II collagen antibodies showed a very low incidence in the hearing loss group. Lymphocytes of otosclerosis, Meniere's disease and other sensorineural deafness patients proliferated in response to concanavalin A and to type II collagen to a lower extent than peripheral blood lymphocytes from healthy controls. Nonetheless, these differences were not statistically significant. The immune hyperreactivity to type II collagen cannot explain the autoimmune mechanism of hearing losses. Humoral and cellular hyperreactivities to inner ear proteins different from type II collagen, could explain the autoimmune mechanism of deafness.
Acta Oto-Laryngologica 02/1999; 119(6):690-4. · 1.08 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: A human cDNA expression library that was used to investigate the nature of autoantigens recognized by the serum from a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus revealed the presence of antibodies directed against two transcriptional regulation protein: DEK, a site-specific 45 kD DNA binding protein, likely involved in signal transduction and transcriptional regulation, and a novel 28 kD protein that showed a 94% homology with murine ALY, a nuclear protein that plays a role in regulating the activity of TCRalpha enhancer complex. Whereas autoantibodies directed to epitopes on DEK are commonly found in patients with pauciarticular onset juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, autoantibodies against ALY have not been described and their occurrence has led to the cloning of the cDNA sequence of the first member of the human ALY family.
Human Immunology 02/1999; 60(1):57-62. · 2.84 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Autoantibodies to aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases are highly associated with myositis and detection is important in clinical diagnosis; however, current methods of screening limit its clinical utility. In the present study, alanyl-tRNA synthetase (PL-12) recombinant protein was obtained by immunological screening of a HeLa expression library and used in an ELISA with 22 anti-PL-12 sera, 200 autoimmune sera negative for PL-12 and 100 healthy individual sera. Sensitivity of the method was 95% (21/22) and specificity 100%. Mapping of the immunoreactive region was carried out using three anti-PL-12 sera and different recombinant protein-derived peptides. Results show that the same conformational epitope located within amino acids 730-951 of the PL-12 antigen outside the catalytic region was recognized by the three anti-PL-12 sera tested. We conclude that ELISA using recombinant protein is an effective and useful method for routine screening for anti-PL-12 autoantibodies.
Clinical & Experimental Immunology 12/1998; 114(2):161-5. · 3.36 Impact Factor
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Medicina Clínica 08/1998; 111(4):158. · 1.38 Impact Factor
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Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases 05/1998; 57(4):261-2. · 8.73 Impact Factor
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British journal of rheumatology 04/1998; 37(3):349-50.
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ABSTRACT: To investigate the presence of a suppressive antibody activity in sera from patients with autoimmune diseases, the IgG autoreactivity in whole serum was compared to that of the IgG fraction purified by affinity chromatography on protein G-sepharose. Competitive inhibition assays on the binding to histone, dsDNA, RNP and thyroglobulin of the purified IgG fraction by the autologous IgM present in serum without IgG and depleted of <100 kD components (named IgM fraction) were also performed. The IgG reactivity to the autoantigens tested was considerably increased in the IgG fraction than in the whole serum drawn from a healthy control and from three SLE patients in an inactive-phase of disease. Addition of the IgM fraction to the autologous purified IgG resulted in a dose-dependent inhibition of IgG binding to the autoantigens tested. However, no differences were observed between the autoreactivity of the IgG in whole serum and that of the purified IgG fraction from active-phase SLE patients, or from two patients with autoimmune thyroiditis, and the autologous IgM fractions did not inhibit significantly binding to the autoantigens under study of the purified IgG fraction. Our findings support the concept that the IgG autoreactivity in physiological conditions is regulated by idiotypic interactions between IgG and IgM, and suggest that this regulation is broken in the active phase of autoimmune diseases and that clinical remission from SLE could be associated with the restoration of this control mechanism. Additionally, qualitative differences, such as polyreactivity or change of idiotype in the autoreactive IgG fraction from active-phase disease might contribute to escape of regulation.
Autoimmunity 02/1998; 28(1):47-56. · 2.47 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: A great diversity of antibodies directed to cell proteins has been described in sera of patients with autoimmune diseases. Most of these sera recognize nuclear components, but some others are directed against cytoplasmic autoantigens. Some of the antibodies directed to cytoplasmic autoantigens are well characterized, such as anti-mitochrondial, anti-ribosomal, anti-microsomal and anti-Golgi complex autoantibodies, but the target of many others remains unknown. In the last 5 years we have selected 32 sera with a characteristic speckled cytoplasmic pattern in indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) assay among a total of more than 31,000 sera from patients with any kind of autoimmune manifestation who attend our Connective Tissue Disease Clinic. Using a human cDNA expression library, we have identified a new autoantibody specificity named RCD-8 in five of these sera, directed to one cytoplasmic autoantigen. Affinity-purified antibodies eluted from a positive clone reproduced the same IIF cytoplasmic staining pattern as native serum and reacted with one single band of 160 kD on an immunoblot of HeLa cell extract. The sequence was found homologous to an autoantigen recently reported named Ge-1, and contains a nuclear localization sequence (NLS), an active protein domain made by a contiguous stretch of amino acids which allows the selective entry of the protein into the nucleus. The five patients whose sera exhibited this new autoantibody specificity displayed different autoimmune pathological profiles.
Clinical & Experimental Immunology 04/1997; 107(3):501-6. · 3.36 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Following the unexpected finding of antibodies to GBM in a patient with Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in the absence of kidney abnormalities, the presence of anti-GBM antibodies was analysed in 14 patients with pulmonary P. carinii infection who did not have clinical evidence of autoimmune glomerulonephritis. Patients were divided into three groups: HIV- with P. carinii pneumonia (n = 4), HIV+ with P. carinii pneumonia (n = 5) and HIV- carriers of P. carinii without pneumonia (n = 5). As control groups, HIV- patients with community-acquired non-P. carinii pneumonia (n = 6) and healthy individuals (n = 16) were included. Anti-GBM antibodies, studied with a quantitative enzyme immunoassay (EIA) for anti-alpha3 chain of collagen IV antibodies, were detected in three out of the four HIV-patients with P. carinii pneumonia, but not in any individuals of the other categories. These results suggest that P. carinii alveolar injury or the host response to the organism could affect the basal membrane Goodpasture antigen or a similar antigen, and induces anti-GBM antibody production in HIV- patients, and support the hypothesis that, at least in some cases, Goodpasture's syndrome could be triggered by an alveolar lesion induced by a P. carinii pneumonia.
Clinical & Experimental Immunology 04/1997; 107(3):448-50. · 3.36 Impact Factor