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Critical Reviews™ in Immunology

 

ISSN for PRINT: 1040-8401

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$831.00

Issues per year:

6

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2001, Volume21

Issue 1-3

  310 pages  

   

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Issue price - $396.00  

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  • On the Initial Trigger of Myasthenia Gravis and Suppression of the Disease by Antibodies Against the MHC Peptide Region Involved in the Presentation of a Pathogenic T-Cell Epitope
  • M. Zouhair Atassi
    Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Department of Immunology, Baylor College of Medicine, One Baylor Plaza, Houston, TX 77030

    Minako Oshima
    Departments of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas

    Philip Deitiker
    Departments of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas


    ABSTRACT

    Myasthenia gravis (MG) is a disabling autoimmune disease caused by autoantibodies (auto-Abs) against the self-acetylcholine receptor (AChR). Although a great deal of information is known about the molecular and cellular parameters of the disease, its initial trigger, however, is not known. To study the possibility of the involvement of microbial antigens that mimic AChR in triggering MG, we have searched the microbial proteins in the data bank for regions that are similar in structure to the regions of human (h) AChR a chain recognized by auto-Abs in MG patients. Hundreds of candidate structures on a large number of bacterial and viral proteins were identified. To test the feasibility of the idea, we synthesized four microbial regions similar to each of the major autodeterminants of hAChR (a12–27, a111–126, a122–138, a182–198) and investigated their ability to bind auto-Abs in MG and normal sera controls. It was found that MG sera potentially recognized a significant number of these microbial regions. The results indicate that in some MG cases, immune responses to microbial antigens may cross-react with self-antigen (in this case hAChR) and could constitute initial triggers of the disease.
    Although anti-AChR Abs directly contribute to the degradation of AChR at the neuromuscular junctions, autoreactive T cells provide help to B cells that synthesize anti-AChR auto-Abs. To cause MG, T cells must recognize the pathogenic epitopes in the context of MHC class II molecules related to MG. The ability to regulate AChR presentation (hence AChR-reactive T-cell activation) could form the basis of an effective strategy for the control of autoimmunity in MG by selectively inhibiting the function of the Ir gene loci linked to disease susceptibility. An animal model of MG (experimental autoimmune MG, EAMG) can be induced in C57BL/6 (B6, H-2b) mice by immunization with Torpedo californica (t) AChR. A mutant mouse of B6, B6.C-H-2bm12 (bm12), which has three amino acid changes (at residues 67, 70, and 71) in the I-Abb subunit, is resistant to EAMG development. Recently, we showed that region 62–76 of I-Abb, which contains the above residues, is involved in the binding to a pathogenic T-cell epitope within peptide ta146–162. We have prepared several monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against peptide I-Abb62–76, which are highly cross-reactive with I-Ab molecules. These mAbs inhibited in vitro the proliferation of disease-related T cells of B6 specific to tAChR peptide ta146–162. Passive transfer of these mAbs suppressed the occurrence of clinical EAMG, which was accompanied by lower T-cell and Ab responses to tAChR. The results indicated that blocking disease-related MHC by targeting a disease-associated region on MHC molecules could be an effective, straightforward, and feasible strategy for immunointervention in MG.

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