Abstract

CD177 is a neutrophil-specific receptor presenting the proteinase 3 (PR3) autoantigen on the neutrophil surface. CD177 expression is restricted to a neutrophil subset, resulting in CD177pos/mPR3high and CD177neg/mPR3low populations. The CD177pos/mPR3high subset has implications for antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibody (ANCA)–associated autoimmune vasculitis, wherein patients harbor PR3-specific ANCAs that activate neutrophils for degranulation. Here, we generated high-affinity anti-CD177 monoclonal antibodies, some of which interfered with PR3 binding to CD177 (PR3 “blockers”) as determined by surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy and used them to test the effect of competing PR3 from the surface of CD177pos neutrophils. Because intact anti-CD177 antibodies also caused neutrophil activation, we prepared nonactivating Fab fragments of a PR3 blocker and nonblocker that bound specifically to CD177pos neutrophils. We observed that Fab blocker clone 40, but not nonblocker clone 80, dose-dependently reduced anti-PR3 antibody binding to CD177pos neutrophils. Importantly, preincubation with clone 40 significantly reduced respiratory burst in primed neutrophils challenged with either monoclonal antibodies to PR3 or PR3–ANCA immunoglobulin G from ANCA-associated autoimmune vasculitis patients. After separating the two CD177/mPR3 neutrophil subsets from individual donors by magnetic sorting, we found that PR3–ANCAs provoked significantly more superoxide production in CD177pos/mPR3high than in CD177neg/mPR3low neutrophils, and that anti-CD177 Fab clone 40 reduced the superoxide production of CD177pos cells to the level of the CD177neg cells. Our data demonstrate the importance of the CD177:PR3 membrane complex in maintaining a high ANCA epitope density and thereby underscore the contribution of CD177 to the severity of PR3–ANCA diseases.

Highlights

  • As the most abundant leukocytes, neutrophil plasmon resonance spectroscopy, and used them granulocytes represent one of the first lines of to test the effect of competing proteinase 3 (PR3) from the surface of CD177pos neutrophils

  • We species (ROS) and degranulation, whereby stores of cytotoxic species housed in several types of observed that fragments bind to CD177pos prepared (Fab) blocker clone 40, but not nonintracellular, membrane bound compartments blocker clone 80, dose-dependently reduced antiPR3 antibody binding to CD177pos neutrophils

  • We show that removing CD177 bound PR3 reduces the sensitivity of mixed neutrophil pools to PR3ANCA treatment

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Summary

Introduction

As the most abundant leukocytes, neutrophil plasmon resonance spectroscopy, and used them granulocytes represent one of the first lines of to test the effect of competing PR3 from the surface of CD177pos neutrophils. We incubated isolated primed neutrophils with either anti-CD177 IgG or their corresponding Fabs and determined to what extent they initiated oxidative burst by measuring the production of superoxide in the resulting aliquots. We verified that our anti-CD177 monoclonal intact IgG did elicit superoxide release, the antibodies could bind to intact human CD177pos corresponding (Fab)[2] did not show this neutrophils.

Results
Conclusion
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