Back to Search Start Over

Identification of new autoantigens by protein array indicates a role for IL4 neutralization in autoimmune hepatitis

Authors :
Antonella Sinisi
Mariacristina Crosti
Renzo Nogarotto
Massimiliano Pagani
Paolo Muratori
Anna Linda Zignego
Milena Arigò
Jens Geginat
Elisa Sugliano
Francesco Marabita
Chiara Zingaretti
Luigi Muratori
Maurizio Marconi
Pietro Invernizzi
Cristina Cheroni
Raoul J. P. Bonnal
Paolo Marcatili
Piero Colombatto
Sergio Abrignani
Monica Moro
Raffaele De Francesco
Maurizia Rossana Brunetto
Angela Cardaci
Mauro Bombaci
Ferruccio Bonino
Zingaretti C
Arigo' M
Cardaci A
Moro M
Crosti M
Sinisi A
Sugliano E
Cheroni C
Marabita F
Nogarotto R
Bonnal RJ
Marcatili P
Marconi M
Zignego A
Muratori P
Invernizzi P
Colombatto P
Brunetto M
Bonino F
De Francesco R
Geginat J
Pagani M
Muratori L
Abrignani S
Bombaci M.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) is an unresolving inflammation of the liver of unknown cause. Diagnosis requires the exclusion of other conditions and the presence of characteristic features such as specific autoantibodies. Presently, these autoantibodies have relatively low sensitivity and specificity and are identified via immunostaining of cells or tissues; therefore, there is a diagnostic need for better and easy-to-assess markers. To identify new AIH-specific autoantigens, we developed a protein microarray comprising 1626 human recombinant proteins, selected in silico for being secreted or membrane associated. We screened sera from AIH patients on this microarray and compared the reactivity with that of sera from healthy donors and patients with chronic viral hepatitis C. We identified six human proteins that are specifically recognized by AIH sera. Serum reactivity to a combination of four of these autoantigens allows identification of AIH patients with high sensitivity (82%) and specificity (92%). Of the six autoantigens, the interleukin-4 (IL4) receptor fibronectin type III domain of the IL4 receptor (CD124), which is expressed on the surface of both lymphocytes and hepatocytes, showed the highest individual sensitivity and specificity for AIH. Remarkably, patients' sera inhibited STAT6 phosphorylation induced by IL4 binding to CD124, demonstrating that these autoantibodies are functional and suggesting that IL4 neutralization has a pathogenetic role in AIH.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....933bbdc280ee093a30bb92dba82a9099