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LJP 1082: A TOLERAGEN FOR HUGHES SYNDROME
JT Merrill
A hallmark of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and related
autoimmune diseases such as the antiphospholipid syndrome (APL
or Hughes syndrome) is an apparent breakdown in tolerance, the
process by which the body distinguishes self from nonself in
order to maintain a versatile immune defense while protecting
itself from self-annihilation. To some extent, loss of tolerance
is a desirable feature of host immunity, and is known to occur
in healthy individuals. Optimal tolerance then is probably not
an all or nothing phenomenon. Autoimmunity should be seen as
a breakdown in homeostasis rather than a completely aberrant
kind of immunity. This leads to special considerations in the
assessment of potentially toleragenic therapies, in which an
attempt is made to re-educate the immune system. LJP 1082 is
designed as a polyvalent antigenic structure aimed at crosslinking
specific surface immunoglobulin and tolerizing B cells to _2-glycoprotein
I. Issues of antigenic selection and multiplex forces influencing
tolerance and immunity may have impact on its optimal development
and use in patients.
Published in
Lupus 2004
Volume13, Issue 5: pp 335-338
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