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1.
Autoantibodies (aAbs) to thyroid peroxidase (TPO), the hallmark of autoimmune thyroid disease (AITD), recognize conformational epitopes restricted to an immunodominant region (IDR), divided into two overlapping domains A and B. Despite numerous efforts aimed at localizing the IDR and identifying aAb-interacting residues on TPO, only two critical amino acids, Lys(713) and Tyr(772), have been characterized. Precise and complete delineation of the other residues involved in the IDR remains to be defined. By using a recombinant anti-TPO aAb T13, we demonstrated that four regions on TPO are part of the IDR/B; one of them, located between amino acids 713 and 720, is particularly important for the binding of sera from patients suffering from AITD. To precisely define critical residues implicated in the binding of aAb to human TPO, we used directed mutagenesis and expressed the mutants in stably transfected CHO cells. Then we assessed the kinetic parameters involved in the interactions between anti-TPO aAbs and mutants by real-time analysis. We identified (i) the minimal epitope 713-717 recognized by mAb 47 (a reference antibody) and (ii) the amino acids used as contact points for two IDR-specific human monoclonal aAbs TR1.9 (Pro(715) and Asp(717)) and T13 (Lys(713), Phe(714), Pro(715), and Glu(716)). Using a rational strategy to identify complex epitopes on proteins showing a highly convoluted architecture, this study definitively identifies the amino acids Lys(713)-Asp(717) as being the key residues recognized by IDR/B-specific anti-TPO aAbs in AITD.  相似文献   

2.
Human anti-thyroid peroxidase (TPO) autoantibodies (aAb) are generated during autoimmune thyroid diseases (AITD). Within recent years, increasing knowledge of the TPO-specific aAb repertoire, gained mainly by the use of combinatorial library methodology, has led to the cloning and sequencing of around 180 human anti-TPO aAb. Analysis of the immunoglobulin (Ig) variable (V) genes encoding the TPO aAb in the ImMunoGeneTics database (IMGT) (http://imgt.cines.fr) reveals major features of the TPO-directed aAb repertoire during AITD. Heavy chain VH domains of TPO-specific aAb from Graves' disease patients preferentially use D proximal IGHV1 genes, whereas those from Hashimoto's thyroiditis are characterized more frequently by IGHV3 genes, mainly located in the middle of the IGH locus. A large proportion of the anti-TPO heavy chain VH domains is obtained following a VDJ recombination process that uses inverted D genes. J distal IGKV1 and IGLV1 genes are predominantly used in TPO aAb. In contrast to the numerous somatic hypermutations in the TPO-specific heavy chains, there is only limited amino acid replacement in most of the TPO-specific light chains, particularly in those encoded by J proximal IGLV or IGKV genes, suggesting that a defect in receptor editing can occur during aAb generation in AITD. Among the predominant IGHV1 or IGKV1 TPO aAb, conserved somatic mutations are the hallmark of the TPO aAb repertoire. The aim of this review is to provide new insights into aAb generation against TPO, a major autoantigen involved in AITD.  相似文献   

3.
Thyroid peroxidase (TPO) autoantibody epitopes are largely restricted to an immunodominant region (IDR) on the extracellular region of the native molecule. Localization of the IDR has been a longstanding and difficult goal. The TPO extracellular region comprises a large myeloperoxidase-like domain, linked to the plasma membrane by two smaller domains with homology to complement control protein (CCP) and epidermal growth factor (EGF), respectively. Recent studies have focused on the CCP- and EGF-like domains as the putative location of the TPO autoantibody IDR. To address this issue, we attempted to express on the surface of transfected cells native TPO in which the CCP- and EGF-like domains were deleted, either together or individually. We used a quartet of human monoclonal autoantibodies that define the TPO IDR, as well as polyclonal TPO autoantibodies in patients' sera, to detect these mutated TPO molecules by flow cytometry. The combined CCP/EGF-like domain deletion did not produce a signal with TPO autoantibodies but did not traffic to the cell surface. In contrast, both monoclonal and polyclonal autoantibodies recognized TPO with the juxtamembrane EGF-like domain deleted equally as well as the wild-type TPO on the cell surface. TPO with the CCP-like domain deleted expressed normally on the cell surface, as determined using the polyclonal mouse antiserum. Nevertheless, this modified TPO molecule was recognized very poorly by both the human monoclonal autoantibodies and the polyclonal autoantibodies in patients' sera. In conclusion, we have clearly excluded the juxtamembrane EGF-like domain as being part of the IDR. In contrast, a component of the CCP-like domain does contribute to the IDR. These data, together with findings from other studies, localize the TPO autoantibody IDR to the junction of the CCP-like domain and the much larger myeloperoxidase-like domain on TPO.  相似文献   

4.
In an attempt to explore the natural variable heavy and light chain (VH/VL) pairing of autoantibodies involved in Graves' disease, we constructed a phage-displayed Ab library obtained by in-cell PCR of thyroid-infiltrating cells. We report here the molecular cloning and characterization of human single-chain fragment variable regions (scFv) specific for thyroid peroxidase (TPO) generated from this library. On the basis of the nucleotide sequences, three different scFvs were obtained (ICA1, ICB7, and ICA5). All were encoded by genes derived from the VH1 and Vlambda1 gene families. Using BIACORE for epitope mapping and kinetic analysis, we showed that these scFvs exhibited high affinity (Kd = 1 nM) for TPO and recognized three different epitopes. The biological relevance of these scFvs as compared with serum anti-TPO autoantibodies was assessed by competition studies. Sera from all the 29 Graves' disease patients tested were able to strongly inhibit (60-100%) the binding of the 3 scFvs to TPO. These data demonstrate that the in-cell PCR library generated human anti-TPO scFvs that retained the VH/VL pairing found in vivo and that the different epitope specificities defined by these scFvs overlapped with those found in the sera of patients with autoimmune thyroid disease.  相似文献   

5.
We have evaluated the epitope specificity of natural antihuman thyroglobulin (hTg) autoantibodies (aAb) in the plasma of healthy individuals. By an indirect ELISA technique, we selected 56 plasma samples with high anti-hTg antibody activity and used the IgG fraction isolated from these plasma to study the antigenic domains on the hTg molecule recognized by the natural anti-hTg aAb. A panel of 15 mAb, coupled to alkaline phosphatase and recognizing six regions (I to VI) on the hTg molecule, served to identify the domains recognized by the natural anti-hTg aAb using a competitive ELISA procedure. A total of 26 of the IgG fractions was found to interact with at least one of the regions defined by our battery of mAb. Region V was recognized by the majority of the IgG fractions. Interestingly, region II was rarely recognized by the same IgG fraction that reacted with region V. Inasmuch as we have previously shown that region II is mainly recognized by aAb in the serum of subjects with various thyroid disorders, we propose that recognition of region V reflects the normal physiologic state of the immune system with respect to the hTg molecule.  相似文献   

6.
The biosynthesis of thyroid hormone from thyroglobulin is catalysed by thyroid peroxidase (TPO), an integral membrane protein. TPO is also a major autoantigen in autoimmune thyroid disease and autoantibodies to TPO are markers for disease activity. Large quantities of purified TPO are essential for elucidating its structure and understanding its role in disease activity. We describe the high yield purification of full-length recombinant human TPO from baculovirus infected insect cells and compare it to purified native TPO from human thyroid glands. In contrast to native human TPO, the human TPO produced in insect cells as a recombinant protein was insoluble and resistant to solubilisation in detergents. Reversible substitution of lysine residues with citraconic anhydride led to increased solubility of the recombinant TPO, allowing high-yield purification by monoclonal antibody chromatography. The purified enzyme preparation was shown to be TPO by its reactivity with monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay and Western blotting. Both the human and recombinant purified TPO preparations also react with sera from patients with autoimmune thyroid disease, although the binding of conformational dependent autoantibodies was considerably lower to the recombinant TPO than to the native TPO. This suggests that the recombinant TPO may differ in some aspects of its tertiary structure. The purified recombinant TPO was devoid of enzyme activity, in contrast to the enzymatically active, purified human TPO preparations. Both preparations contained comparable amounts of haem (R(z)=0.269), but a shift in the Soret band of recombinant TPO (402 nm) from that of natural TPO (409 nm) indicates that the lack of enzymatic activity of the recombinant enzyme may be due to changes in the protein backbone surrounding the haem. Both the purified native and recombinant TPO, under non-denaturing conditions, show evidence of high molecular mass oligomers, although the latter preparation is prone to a greater degree of aggregation. In conclusion, our studies indicate that recombinant TPO generated in insect cells is conformationally distinct from the native TPO, is insoluble and enzymatically inactive, consistent with the difficulties associated with its purification and crystallisation.  相似文献   

7.
Human thyroid peroxidase (TPO) has been purified from thyroid microsomes by immunoaffinity chromatography using a monoclonal antibody (mAb) to TPO. The eluted material had a specific activity of 381 U/mg and exhibited a peak in the Soret region. The ratio of A411 to A280 ranged from 0.20 to 0.25. Upon SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the purified enzyme gave two contiguous bands in the 100 kDa region. Further, it has been demonstrated that sera with anti-microsomal autoantibodies from patients presenting Graves' or Hashimoto's thyroiditis diseases were able to bind to purified TPO and to inhibit in a dose-dependent manner the mAb binding to purified TPO. This suggests that TPO is the thyroid antigen termed to date the microsomal antigen.  相似文献   

8.
Human thyroperoxidase (TPO) ectodomain is successively made of myeloperoxidase-, complement control protein repeat-, and epidermal growth factor-like gene modules. However, the TPO immunodominant region targeted by autoantibodies from patients with an autoimmune thyroid disease has not been mapped on the molecule. Here, we used two purified recombinant TPO peptides produced in eukaryotic cells, which correspond to the major first and the further two gene modules of TPO. We compared by ELISA their respective immunoreactivity with that of the recombinant soluble TPO containing all the three gene modules. We used well-characterized murine and human TPO monoclonal antibodies and human autoantibodies affinity-purified from a large pool of patients' sera. We found that the TPO immunodominant region was susceptible to denaturation and required the integrity of the molecule to be correctly expressed. We concluded that TPO B-cell autoepitopes are made by amino acids from the three gene modules, which fold in one highly conformational immunodominant region.  相似文献   

9.
Abs can tune the responses of Ag-specific T cells by influencing the nature of the epitope repertoire displayed by APCs. We explored the interaction between human self-reactive T cells and human monoclonal autoantibodies from combinatorial Ig-gene libraries derived from autoimmune thyroiditis patients and specific for the main autoantigen thyroid peroxidase (TPO). All human mAbs extensively influenced the T cell epitope repertoire recognized by different TPO-specific T cell clones. The action of the human mAbs was complex, because sometimes the same Ab suppressed or enhanced the epitopes recognized by the 10 different TPO-specific T cell clones. The human mAbs could modulate the epitope repertoire when TPO was added exogenously and when expressed constitutively on the surface of APCs. However, they could not unmask an immunodominant cryptic TPO epitope. In this study, we show that human autoantibodies influence the activity of self-reactive T cells and prove their relevance in concealing or exposing epitopes recognized by self-reactive T cells. However, our results further stress the biological significance of the immunodominant cryptic epitope we have defined and its potential importance in the evolution of autoimmunity.  相似文献   

10.
Thyroid peroxidase (TPO) catalyses the biosynthesis of thyroid hormones and is a major autoantigen in Hashimoto’s disease—the most common organ-specific autoimmune disease. Epitope mapping studies have shown that the autoimmune response to TPO is directed mainly at two surface regions on the molecule: immunodominant regions A and B (IDR-A, and IDR-B). TPO has been a major target for structural studies for over 20 years; however, to date, the structure of TPO remains to be determined. We have used a molecular modelling approach to investigate plausible modes of TPO structure and dimer organisation. Sequence features of the C-terminus are consistent with a coiled-coil dimerization motif that most likely anchors the TPO dimer in the apical membrane of thyroid follicular cells. Two contrasting models of TPO were produced, differing in the orientation and exposure of their active sites relative to the membrane. Both models are equally plausible based upon the known enzymatic function of TPO. The “trans” model places IDR-B on the membrane-facing side of the myeloperoxidase (MPO)-like domain, potentially hindering access of autoantibodies, necessitating considerable conformational change, and perhaps even dissociation of the dimer into monomers. IDR-A spans MPO- and CCP-like domains and is relatively fragmented compared to IDR-B, therefore most likely requiring domain rearrangements in order to coalesce into one compact epitope. Less epitope fragmentation and higher solvent accessibility of the “cis” model favours it slightly over the “trans” model. Here, IDR-B clusters towards the surface of the MPO-like domain facing the thyroid follicular lumen preventing steric hindrance of autoantibodies. However, conformational rearrangements may still be necessary to allow full engagement with autoantibodies, with IDR-B on both models being close to the dimer interface. Taken together, the modelling highlights the need to consider the oligomeric state of TPO, its conformational properties, and its proximity to the membrane, when interpreting epitope-mapping data.  相似文献   

11.
A distribution of immunoglobulin G (IgG) subclass of anti-thyroid peroxidase (TPO) autoantibodies was studied to know whether anti-TPO autoantibodies are closely implicated in the pathogenesis of human autoimmune thyroid diseases. As a result of analyzing 14 patients' sera, 7 with Graves' disease and 7 with Hashimoto's thyroiditis, anti-TPO autoantibodies were found to consist of mainly IgG1 subclass. Percentages of both IgG1 and IgG2 subclasses in IgG class of autoantibodies corresponded to those in the normal serum composition, whereas IgG3 subclass was scarcely contained in anti-TPO autoantibodies and IgG4 subclass markedly increased. It was thought that anti-TPO autoantibodies had a capability to lyse thyroid follicular cells by the mechanism of antibody-dependent complement-mediated cytolysis, because IgG1 and IgG2 subclasses of antibodies can fix complement and TPO locates in apical membrane surface of thyroid follicular cells. Comparing Graves' disease with Hashimoto's thyroiditis, mean percentages of both IgG1 and IgG2 subclasses of 2 groups were statistically different. Namely, sera of patients with Graves' disease had higher and lower mean percentages of IgG1 and IgG2 subclasses of autoantibodies, respectively, than those with Hashimoto's thyroiditis, though no plausible explanation for these differences can be offered at the present time.  相似文献   

12.
Autoantibodies directed against the thyroid peroxidase (TPO), the thyroid microsomal antigen, are widely used to diagnose human autoimmune thyroid disease. A cloned 3.088 kb cDNA coding for the entire mature human TPO was isolated from a cDNA library derived from a pathological thyroid gland of a Graves' disease patient and used further to generate a so-called TPO epitope cDNA library in order to map linear autoantigenic epitopes involving a recombinant molecular biology approach. The TPO epitope cDNA library consisting of randomly fragmented cDNA sequences inserted in the expression vector pGEX-2T was expressed in Escherichia coli and screened with characterized anti-TPO autoantisera from Hashimoto's disease patients. All the sera were positively tested with a purified thyroid microsomal antigen fraction (TMA/TPO). Only about 1% of examined autoantisera were able to recognize bacterial expressed recombinant TPO representing sequential antigenic determinants. A corresponding autoantigenic epitope with 61 amino acids in length was located at the C-terminus of human TPO.  相似文献   

13.
Uveal autoantigen with coiled coil domains and ankyrin repeats (UACA) is an autoantigen in patients with panuveitis such as Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease. The prevalence of IgG anti-UACA antibodies in patients with uveitis is significantly higher than healthy controls, suggesting its potential role as an autoantigen. Originally, UACA was cloned from dog thyroid tissue following TSH stimulation. So, we presumed UACA could be a novel autoantigen in autoimmune thyroid diseases. We measured serum anti-UACA antibody titer using ELISA in patients with autoimmune thyroid diseases (Graves' disease, Hashimoto's thyroiditis, subacute thyroiditis, and silent thyroiditis). The prevalence of anti-UACA antibodies in Graves' disease group was significantly higher than that in healthy group (15% vs. 0%). Moreover, the prevalence of anti-UACA antibodies in Graves' ophthalmopathy was significantly higher than that in Graves' patients without ophthalmopathy (29% vs. 11%). Especially, 75% of severe ocular myopathy cases showed high UACA titer. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed that UACA protein is expressed in eye muscles as well as human thyroid follicular cells. Taken together, UACA is a novel candidate for eye muscle autoantigens in thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy.  相似文献   

14.
A human Fab fragment (SP2) which binds specifically to human thyroid peroxidase has been generated by expressing random combinations of heavy and light chain immunoglobulin genes (derived from Graves' thyroid cDNA) in a bacteriophage lambda library. In common with many serum TPO autoantibodies, the cloned Fab fragment is IgG1 kappa and has a high affinity for TPO (approximately 10(-9) M). On the basis of their nucleotide sequences, the heavy and light chain genes coding for SP2 belong to families VHI, (D), JH3 and VKI, JK2, respectively. These data provide the first characterization at a molecular level of a human thyroid peroxidase antibody associated with autoimmune thyroid disease.  相似文献   

15.
Autoantibodies to thyroglobulin (Tg) are a prominent feature of the two autoimmune thyroid diseases, chronic lymphocytic (Hashimoto's) thyroiditis and Graves' disease. Similar autoantibodies are found in the serum of many normal individuals without evidence of thyroid disease. Previous studies have indicated that patients with autoimmune thyroid disease recognize epitopes of Tg which are not usually recognized by normal individuals. The goal of this investigation was to identify peptide fragments of Tg bearing these disease-associated epitopes. For this purpose, we utilized a panel of mAbs that bind to different epitopes of the Tg molecule. One of these mAbs (137C1) reacted with an epitope that was also recognized by the sera of patients with autoimmune thyroiditis. In the present study, we show that two peptides (15 and 23 kDa) that reacted with mAb 137C1 are located in different parts of the Tg molecule. Each peptide inhibited the binding of mAb 137C1 to the other peptide and to the intact Tg, indicating that the same epitope was represented on the two peptides. Loops and helices of the secondary structure of the two peptides might be involved in the conformational epitope recognized by mAb 137C1. A striking finding of this study is that two apparently unrelated fragments of the Tg molecule bind to the same mAb. These findings may have important ramifications with regard to epitope spread and the progression of the autoimmune response to disease.  相似文献   

16.
IA-2 is a major target of autoimmunity in type 1 diabetes. IA-2 responsive T cells recognize determinants within regions represented by amino acids 787-817 and 841-869 of the molecule. Epitopes for IA-2 autoantibodies are largely conformational and not well defined. In this study, we used peptide phage display and homology modeling to characterize the epitope of a monoclonal IA-2 Ab (96/3) from a human type 1 diabetic patient. This Ab competes for IA-2 binding with Abs from the majority of patients with type 1 diabetes and therefore binds a region close to common autoantibody epitopes. Alignment of peptides obtained after screening phage-displayed peptide libraries with purified 96/3 identified a consensus binding sequence of Asn-x-Glu-x-x-(aromatic)-x-x-Gly. The predicted surface on a three-dimensional homology model of the tyrosine phosphatase domain of IA-2 was analyzed for clusters of Asn, Glu, and aromatic residues and amino acids contributing to the epitope investigated using site-directed mutagenesis. Mutation of each of amino acids Asn(858), Glu(836), and Trp(799) reduced 96/3 Ab binding by >45%. Mutations of these residues also inhibited binding of serum autoantibodies from IA-2 Ab-positive type 1 diabetic patients. This study identifies a region commonly recognized by autoantibodies in type 1 diabetes that overlaps with dominant T cell determinants.  相似文献   

17.
The role Hsp60 might play in various inflammatory and autoimmune diseases is under investigation, but little information exists pertaining to Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (HT). With the aim to fill this gap, in the present work, we directed our attention to Hsp60 participation in HT pathogenesis. We found Hsp60 levels increased in the blood of HT patients compared to controls. The chaperonin was immunolocalized in thyroid tissue specimens from patients with HT, both in thyrocytes and oncocytes (Hurthle cells) with higher levels compared to controls (goiter). In oncocytes, we found Hsp60 not only in the cytoplasm but also on the plasma membrane, as shown by double immunofluorescence performed on fine needle aspiration cytology. By bioinformatics, we found regions in the Hsp60 molecule with remarkable structural similarity with the thyroglobulin (TG) and thyroid peroxidase (TPO) molecules, which supports the notion that autoantibodies against TG and TPO are likely to recognize Hsp60 on the plasma membrane of oncocytes. This was also supported by data obtained by ELISA, showing that anti-TG and anti-TPO antibodies cross-react with human recombinant Hsp60. Antibody-antigen (Hsp60) reaction on the cell surface could very well mediate thyroid cell damage and destruction, perpetuating inflammation. Experiments with recombinant Hsp60 did not show stimulation of cytokine production by peripheral blood mononuclear cells from HT patients. All together, these results led us to hypothesize that Hsp60 may be an active player in HT pathogenesis via an antibody-mediated immune mechanism.  相似文献   

18.
Endocrine epithelial cells, targets of the autoimmune response in thyroid and other organ-specific autoimmune diseases, express HLA class II (HLA-II) molecules that are presumably involved in the maintenance and regulation of the in situ autoimmune response. HLA-II molecules thus expressed by thyroid cells have the "compact" conformation and are therefore expected to stably bind autologous peptides. Using a new approach to study in situ T cell responses without the characterization of self-reactive T cells and their specificity, we have identified natural HLA-DR-associated peptides in autoimmune organs that will allow finding peptide-specific T cells in situ. This study reports a first analysis of HLA-DR natural ligands from ex vivo Graves' disease-affected thyroid tissue. Using mass spectrometry, we identified 162 autologous peptides from HLA-DR-expressing cells, including thyroid follicular cells, with some corresponding to predominant molecules of the thyroid colloid. Most interestingly, eight of the peptides were derived from a major autoantigen, thyroglobulin. In vitro binding identified HLA-DR3 as the allele to which one of these peptides likely associates in vivo. Computer modeling and bioinformatics analysis suggested other HLA-DR alleles for binding of other thyroglobulin peptides. Our data demonstrate that although the HLA-DR-associated peptide pool in autoimmune tissue mostly belongs to abundant ubiquitous proteins, peptides from autoantigens are also associated to HLA-DR in vivo and therefore may well be involved in the maintenance and the regulation of the autoimmune response.  相似文献   

19.
Genetic studies have identified the HLA and CTLA4 regions as susceptibility loci for the development of common autoimmune thyroid diseases (AITDs), including Graves' disease and autoimmune hypothyroidism. Despite numerous studies, the identification of a third locus has remained elusive. Genetic-linkage studies have implicated chromosome 8q24 as a susceptibility locus for AITD. The gene encoding thyroglobulin (Tg), which encodes a major thyroid autoantigen, maps to this region, and a recent study has reported the association of several exonic single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with disease. Although these preliminary data are potentially exciting, caution needs to be exercised, and replication of the data sought before Tg can be designated as the third locus for AITD.  相似文献   

20.
Thyroperoxidase (TPO), a type I transmembrane heme containing glycoprotein, catalyzes iodide organification and thyroid hormone synthesis. One of the two main alternatively spliced forms of this enzyme, TPOzanelli, which is present in Graves's disease thyroid tissue, has a cytoplasmic domain completely modified. In the first stage of this study, the results of RT-PCR experiments showed that the TPOzanelli mRNA is present in normal thyroid tissue. We then generated CHO cell lines expressing the wild-type TPO (TPO1) and the alternatively spliced form TPOzanelli. Upon investigating a panel of 12 mAbs directed against the extracellular domain of TPO1 and sera from patients with a high titer of TPO autoantibodies, we observed that (i) the three-dimensional structure of this domain is similar in both isoforms; (ii) the autoantibodies recognize TPOzanelli as well as TPO1. The results of pulse chase and cell surface biotinylation experiments showed that the TPOzanelli has a shorter half-life (7 versus 11 h) and is expressed at the cell surface in lesser amounts than TPO1 (7 versus 15%). The total enzymatic activity and cell surface activity were determined in CHO cells expressing TPO1 and TPOzanelli, and TPO1 and TPOzanelli were found to have similar levels of activity. It was established that approximately 20% of the TPO purified from a Graves' disease thyroid gland was precipitated by polyclonal antibodies directed against a specific part of the cytoplasmic tail of TPOzanelli. This confirmed that the protein corresponding to the mRNA is present in the thyroid tissue. All in all, these results indicate that TPOzanelli can be expected to play a role in thyroid hormone synthesis and in thyroid autoimmunity.  相似文献   

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