15 research outputs found
Steroid 21-hydroxylase is a major autoantigen involved in adult onset autoimmune Addison's disease
AbstractAn adrenal-specific protein reacting with autoantibodies in the sera of patients with adult onset Addison's disease has been purified from human adrenal glands. The protein, mol.wt. 55K, has the biochemical characteristics of steroid 21-hydroxylase and reacts on Western blots with rabbit antibodies to recombinant 21-hydroxylase. Absorption of the native human 55K adrenal protein with human adrenal autoantibodies prevented the subsequent reaction of the 55K protein with rabbit antibodies to 21-hydroxylase in Western blot analysis. In addition, human adrenal autoantibodies reacted with recombinant 21-hydroxylase expressed in yeast. These data indicate that the adrenal specific enzyme steroid 21-hydroxylase is a major autoantigen involved in adult onset autoimmune Addison's disease
Premature ovarian failure and ovarian autoimmunity
Premature ovarian failure (POF) is defined as a syndrome characterized by
menopause before the age of 40 yr. The patients suffer from anovulation
and hypoestrogenism. Approximately 1% of women will experience menopause
before the age of 40 yr. POF is a heterogeneous disorder with a
multicausal pathogenesis involving chromosomal, genetic, enzymatic,
infectious, and iatrogenic causes. There remains, however, a group of POF
patients without a known etiology, the so-called "idiopathic" form. An
autoimmune etiology is hypothesized for the POF cases with a concomitant
Addison's disease and/or oophoritis. It is concluded in this review that
POF in association with adrenal autoimmunity and/or Addison's disease
(2-10% of the idiopathic POF patients) is indeed an autoimmune disease.
The following evidence warrants this view: 1) The presence of
autoantibodies to steroid-producing cells in these patients; 2) The
characterization of shared autoantigens between adrenal and ovarian
steroid-producing cells; 3) The histological picture of the ovaries of
such cases (lymphoplasmacellular infiltrate around steroid-producing
cells); 4) The existence of various autoimmune animal models for this
syndrome, which underlines the autoimmune nature of the disease. There is
some circumstantial evidence for an autoimmune pathogenesis in idiopathic
POF patients in the absence of adrenal autoimmunity or Addison's disease.
Arguments in support of this are: 1) The presence of cellular immune
abnormalities in this POF patient group reminiscent of endocrine
autoimmune diseases such as IDDM, Graves' disease, and Addison's disease;
2) The more than normal association with IDDM and myasthenia gravis. Data
on the presence of various ovarian autoantibodies and anti-receptor
antibodies in these patients are, however, inconclusive and need further
evaluation. A strong argument against an autoimmune pathogenesis of POF in
these patients is the nearly absent histological confirmation (the
presence of an oophoritis) in these cases (< 3%). However, in animal
models using ZP immunization, similar follicular depletion and fibrosis
(as in the POF women) can be detected. Accepting the concept that POF is a
heterogenous disorder in which some of the idiopathic forms are based on
an abnormal self-recognition by th
The immunofluorescence techniques in the diagnosis of endocrine autoimmune diseases
In the study of autoimmune diseases, the laboratory plays a very important role. We describe the immunofluorescence techniques (direct, indirect, complement-fixing, double) for determining the presence of autoantibodies and their role in the autoimmune endocrine diseases