Abstract

Given that normal individuals maintain significant levels of serum autoantibodies that share many characteristics with those found in association with autoimmune diseases (AID), it has been proposed that disease could result from defects in supraclonal regulation, namely deviations of normal patterns of immunoglobulin (Ig) connectivity. Using conventional methods, together with a recently developed technique to quantitatively score a variety of V-region-dependent serum IgG interactions, the authors have now compared serum Ig connectivity in a group of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) to healthy controls. The results demonstrate the existence of V-region interactions of serum IgG and IgM in SLE patients and healthy donors, with comparable connectivity titres, diversity and average affinities (microM range), but a wider individual variation and a tendency for higher F(ab')2 directed reactivities in the group of SLE patients. Multivariate statistics analysis of the data derived from reactivity patterns on F(ab')2 subsets, however, distinguished the two groups of donors, and demonstrated a larger dispersion and wider time-dependent variations in the patient population, as compared to healthy controls. The authors conclude that SLE is associated with circulating antibody repertoires that deviate from the patterns and levels of V-region connectivity characteristic of healthy individuals. These findings may shed light on the mechanisms of disease maintenance, and on the basis for the therapeutic effects of normal polyclonal Igs at high doses.

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