1. Specificity of autoantibodies to histone H1 in SLE: relationship to DNA-binding domains.
- Author
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Minota S, Nojima Y, Yamada A, Kanai Y, Winfield JB, and Takaku F
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibodies, Anti-Idiotypic immunology, Antibodies, Antinuclear blood, Antibody Specificity, Autoantigens immunology, Autoantigens metabolism, Binding Sites immunology, Cattle, DNA metabolism, Histones metabolism, Humans, Immunoglobulin G immunology, Immunoglobulin G metabolism, Immunoglobulin M immunology, Immunoglobulin M metabolism, In Vitro Techniques, Antibodies, Antinuclear immunology, DNA immunology, Histones immunology, Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic immunology
- Abstract
Autoantibodies in the sera of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus were examined with respect to their specificity for proteolytic fragments of histone H1 that retain, or do not retain, DNA-binding domains. 16 of 31 sera contained IgG and IgM antibodies to histone H1. IgM antibodies to H1 in 8 sera (50%) were directed at 18 kD and 20 kD alpha-chymotrypic H1 fragments that bore binding sites for DNA, as identified by staining immunoblots containing the fragments with ssDNA plus 6/0, a mouse monoclonal antibody against ssDNA, IgM with this type of histone H1 specificity did not react with comparably-sized V8 protease fragments of H1. IgM antibodies to H1 in the other patients were directed against entirely different epitopes which were preserved in V8 protease digests of H1. In serial studies of three patients during different phase of their SLE, the level of antibodies against the 18 kD and 20 kD histone H1 fragments varied in parallel with the level of anti-ssDNA antibodies in one and varied inversely in the other two. The data suggest that a significant proportion of autoantibodies to histone H1 are directed at a limited number of epitopes localized to H1 fragments containing DNA-binding sites.
- Published
- 1991
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