Abstract

To study the biology of cold autoimmune hemolytic anemia, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-transformed B-cell clones were established from a patient with splenic lymphoma associated with immune hemolysis due to an anti-Pr 2 cold autoantibody. Studies were performed comparing the cold autoantibody present in culture supernatants of these cell lines to the pathogenic cold autoantibodies present in the patient's plasma. Cytogenetic studies of splenic lymphocytes demonstrated an abnormal karyotype (51XX,+3,+9,+12,+13,+18). After EBV transformation, eight clones secreting IgM,κ anti-Pr were isolated; each clone had the same abnormal karyotype as above. DNA isolated from the clones and spleen was analyzed by Southern blot hybridization with J H, C μ, and C κ probes; identical gene rearrangements were seen in each case. Anti-Pr antibodies, isolated from culture supernatant and serum were compared by isoelectric focusing (IEF) and demonstrated similar banding patterns. Distinctive banding patterns, however, were observed in 2 8 clones, suggesting structural differences. Adsorption studies with red blood cells further showed that the observed IEF banding patterns were solely due to anti-Pr cold autoantibody. With a thin-layer chromatography method, the biochemical determinants recognized by the cold autoantibodies were defined as glycolipids containing Neu Acα2-3Galβ1-4Glc sequences. The data demonstrate that the autoantibodies of the EBV-transformed B-cell lines were similar to the pathogenic monoclonal serum autoantibody in both structure and specificity. These clonal cell lines may thus serve to further study the biology of human B-cell lymphomas with defined autoantibody specificity.

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