|
USE OF SINGLE POINT MUTATIONS IN DOMAIN
I OF BETA2-GLYCOPROTEIN I TO DETERMINE
FINE ANTIGENIC SPECIFICITY OF ANTIPHOSPHOLIPID
AUTOANTIBODIES
GM Iverson, S Reddel, EJ Victoria,
KA Cockerill, YX Wang, MA MartiRenom,
A Sali, DM Marquis, SA Krilis, MD Linnik
Autoantibodies against beta(2)-glycoprotein
I (beta(2)GPI) appear to be a critical
feature of the antiphospholipid syndrome
(APS). As determined using domain deletion
mutants, human autoantibodies bind to
the first of five domains present in
beta(2)GPI. In this study the fine detail
of the domain I epitope has been examined
using 10 selected mutants of whole beta(2)GPI
containing single point mutations in
the first domain. The binding to beta(2)GPI
was significantly affected by a number
of single point mutations in domain
I, particularly by mutations in the
region of aa 40-43. Molecular modeling
predicted these mutations to affect
the surface shape and electrostatic
charge of a facet of domain I. Mutation
K19E also had an effect, albeit one
less severe and involving fewer patients.
Similar results were obtained in two
different laboratories using affinity-purified
anti-beta(2)GPI in a competitive inhibition
ELISA and with whole serum in a direct
binding ELISA. This study confirms that
anti-beta(2)GPI autoantibodies bind
to domain I, and that the charged surface
patch defined by residues 40-43 contributes
to a dominant target epitope.
Published in
The Journal of Immunology
2002, Vol 169, Iss 12, pp 7097-7103

|