Abstract

BackgroundAmong the autoimmune rheumatic diseases, it is striking that autoantibodies targeting ubiquitously expressed proteins (eg, topoisomerase‐1) associate with specific clinical complications (eg, interstitial lung disease [ILD]). It has been proposed that enriched antigen expression in inflamed target tissue may play a role in focusing the autoimmune response. We sought to determine whether topoisomerase‐1 expression is enriched in lungs from patients with autoimmune/inflammatory diseases relative to normal lung.MethodsWe used a 99‐core lung tissue microarray (TMA) containing lung tissue from 40 patients with autoimmune inflammatory ILD (cases) and 46 control subjects with normal lungs. We stained the TMA with antibodies to compare topoisomerase‐1 and CD8 expression between patients and control subjects and evaluated whether expression is enriched in specific cell types. Staining was analyzed, and statistical comparisons were performed.ResultsCases were more likely to have global topoisomerase‐1 expression (53% vs 21%; P = 0.003), specifically in pneumocytes (47% vs 16%; P = 0.003) and stromal/immune cells (32% vs 5%; P = 0.002) compared with control subjects. CD8 cell density (223 cells/mm2 vs 102 cells/mm2; P = 0.018) was significantly higher in topoisomerase‐1–positive lung tissues compared with topoisomerase‐1–negative lung tissues. Interestingly, topoisomerase‐1 expression was significantly more common in scleroderma compared with normal lung (67% vs 21%; P = 0.036) and was present more frequently in pneumocytes in these patients (67% vs 16%; P = 0.018).ConclusionsPulmonary expression of topoisomerase‐1 is increased in the setting of autoimmune ILD relative to normal lung, specifically in pneumocytes. This may contribute to the amplification of pulmonary disease in patients with scleroderma with a loss of tolerance to topoisomerase‐1.

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