Abstract

Immunoglobulins G, A, and M (IgG, IgA and IgM) were isolated from multiple sclerosis (MS) cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and sera by Protein A-Sepharose (PAS) affinity chromatography or using solid-phase immunoabsorbents. An isoelectric point heterogenous protein with apparent mol. wt of 74,000–80,000 was seen consistently when CSF Igs were immunoaffinity purified but was never seen when PAS was used for Ig purification. Control experiments exclude the binding of this protein non-specifically either to Sepharose or to Igs or to other CSF proteins. Analysis of purified Igs under non-reducing conditions leads to some reduction in staining pattern indicating that a portion of the protein may be disulfide linked to itself or to other CSF proteins. Immunoblot analysis of CSF Igs separated on 2-DE gels is consistent with a portion of the total CSF Ig protein existing as “free” heavy (H)-chains. PAS requires dimeric Fc fragment of Ig for binding; the differences in 2-DE gels of PAS and immunoaffinity purified Igs may be due to interaction of the 74,000–80,000 protein with “free” H-chain, which nevertheless, still leaves this complex available for binding by anti-H chain antisera. It has been previously suggested that the cytotoxicity of “free” H-chains is abrogated in the absence of the complementary L-chains by H-chain binding proteins; the protein reported here has features similar to these proteins reported previously and may be involved in some way in regulating Ig production in the MS central nervous system.

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