The genetic origin of murine lupus-associated autoantibodies

8Citations
Citations of this article
3Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Systemic lupus erythematosus and rheumatoid arthritis in human and murine systems are characterized by circulating autoantibodies and immune complex deposition in various organs causing tissue damage and disease. To define the molecular and clonotypic origin of these anti-self responses, and to determine whether abnormalities in Ig genes or somatic mechanisms generating autoantibody diversity may contribute to lupus etiology, we performed molecular analyses of the Ig germline gene organization and the Ig gene segments expressed in monoclonal autoantibodies from autoimmune mice. Comparative restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis of a large number of Ig gene loci from autoimmune and normal mice indicated that (a) lupus can develop in different Ig heavy and kappa light chain variable region gene haplotypes, and (b) the Ig germline genes in lupus mice might be normal. To determine whether autoantibodies are encoded by unique Ig gene segments present in the normal germline repertoire, but not expressed in exogenous responses, we compared nucleic acid sequences encoding lupus autoantibodies and antibodies against foreign antigens. Similar, and in some instances even identical, gene segments were expressed in both types of antibodies, indicating that anti-self and anti-foreign responses use the same, or at least an overlapping, germline gene repertoire. A large variety of Ig variable, diversity, and joining gene segments encoded these autoantibodies with different specificities. Hence, the overall murine lupus-associated anti-self response may be essentially unrestricted. Furthermore, limited evidence has been obtained that both germline genes and somatically mutated genes encode autospecificity, making gross abnormalities in mechanisms for somatic mutation of Ig variable genes unlikely. Based on the studies performed thus far, the general principles governing murine lupus-associated anti-self responses and responses against exogenous antigens appear to be the same. © 1987.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Kofler, R., Duchosal, M. A., Johnson, M. E., Aguado, M. T., Strohal, R., Krömer, G., & Fässler, R. (1987). The genetic origin of murine lupus-associated autoantibodies. Immunology Letters, 16(3–4), 265–271. https://doi.org/10.1016/0165-2478(87)90156-8

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free