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Pathogenic relevance of autoantibodies to type XVII collagen from pemphigoid gestationis patients
(2007)
Pemphigoid gestationis (PG) and bullous pemphigoid (BP) are subepidermal autoimmune blistering diseases characterized by self-reactive T and B cells specific for the transmembrane hemidesmosomal protein type XVII collagen/BP180. Major T and B cell epitopes are located within the immunodominant 16th non-collagenous domain A (NC16A) of type XVII collagen. It has been suggested that pathogenically relevant autoantibodies also bind to this immunodominant region. The aim of this study was to map the epitopes targeted by blister-inducing human autoantibodies. For this purpose, we used an in vitro model of autoantibody-induced leucocyte-dependent dermal-epidermal separation. In contrast to the majority of patients with BP (7 of 10), preadsorption against a recombinant form of the NC16A region abolished the blister-inducing potential of autoantibodies from all PG patients tested (n=5). Using overlapping synthetic peptides, we demonstrate that PG autoantibodies bind to 2 defined epitopes within the NC16A region (aa 500-514 and aa 511-523). Preadsorption using an affinity matrix containing these two epitopes completely abolished dermal-epidermal separation induced by PG autoantibodies (in 8 of 9 patients). These findings provide new insights into the pathogenesis of pemphigoid diseases and should prove helpful for the development of an antigen-specific immunoadsorption therapy in PG.
IgG3 is the IgG subclass with the strongest effector functions among all four IgG subclasses and the highest degree of allelic variability among all constant immunoglobulin genes. Due to its genetic position, IgG3 is often the first isotype an antibody switches to before IgG1 or IgG4. Compared with the other IgG subclasses, it has a reduced half-life which is probably connected to a decreased affinity to the neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn). However, a few allelic variants harbor an amino acid replacement of His435 to Arg that reverts the half-life of the resulting IgG3 to the same level as the other IgG subclasses. Because of its functional impact, we hypothesized that the p.Arg435His variation could be associated with susceptibility to autoantibody-mediated diseases like pemphigus vulgaris (PV) and bullous pemphigoid (BP). Using a set of samples from German, Turkish, Egyptian, and Iranian patients and controls, we were able to demonstrate a genetic association of the p.Arg435His variation with PV risk, but not with BP risk. Our results suggest a hitherto unknown role for the function of IgG3 in the pathogenesis of PV.