1. Changes in avidity and level of immunoglobulin G antibodies to Mycobacterium tuberculosis in sera of patients undergoing treatment for pulmonary tuberculosis
- Author
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Lan N. Nguyen, Henk M. Jansen, S. Kuijper, Lenka M. Pereira Arias-Bouda, Arend H. J. Kolk, Anouk Van Der Werf, KIT: Biomedical Research, and Pulmonology
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,Lung Diseases ,Tuberculosis ,Time Factors ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Immunology ,Antibody Affinity ,Antitubercular Agents ,chemical and pharmacologic phenomena ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Antibodies and Mediators of Immunity ,Immunoglobulin G ,Mycobacterium tuberculosis ,Affinity maturation ,Antigen ,Immunology and Allergy ,Medicine ,Humans ,Avidity ,Tuberculosis, Pulmonary ,biology ,business.industry ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,Titer ,biology.protein ,Antibody ,business - Abstract
Much is known about specific antibodies and their titers in patients with tuberculosis. However, little is known about the avidity of these antibodies or whether changes in avidity occur during the progression of the disease or during treatment. The aims of this study were to determine the avidity of antibodies to Mycobacterium tuberculosis in patients with pulmonary tuberculosis, to explore the value of avidity determination for the diagnosis of tuberculosis, and to study changes in levels of antibodies and their avidity during treatment. Antibody avidity was measured by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay with thiocyanate elution. Avidity indices and serum levels of immunoglobulin G to M . tuberculosis were determined for 22 patients with pulmonary tuberculosis before and during treatment and for 24 patients with other pulmonary diseases. Antibody levels and avidity were both significantly higher in untreated tuberculosis patients than in the controls. Avidity determination had more diagnostic potential than determination of the antibody levels. Tuberculosis patients with a long duration of symptoms had higher antibody avidity than those with a recent onset of symptoms, indicating affinity maturation of specific antibodies during active disease. In the early phase of treatment, a decrease in antibody avidity was observed for 73% of all tuberculosis patients, accompanied by an initial increase in antibody levels in 36% of these patients. These phenomena could be explained by an intense stimulation of the humoral response by antigens released from killed bacteria, reflecting early bactericidal activity of antituberculous drugs leading to the production of low-affinity antibodies against these released antigens.
- Published
- 2003