Abstract

Epidermolysis bullosa acquisita (EBA) is an autoimmune blistering disease with circulating antibodies to type VII collagen, a major component of anchoring fibrils located at the dermal-epidermal junction. The purpose of this study was to further confirm the ultrastructural organisation of anchoring fibrils and to assess the relationship between the clinical phenotype of EBA and target site of their autoantibodies on anchoring fibrils. We studied the ultrastructural binding site of circulating autoantibodies from two patients with atypical clinical features who predominantly presented with oral lesions, and compared this with two patients with clinically typical forms of EBA. Immunoblotting of whole dermal extracts showed labelling of 290-kDa bands consistent with that of type VII collagen as well as the non-collagenous (NC-1) domain fusion protein in three out of four patients' sera. Postembedding immunoelectron microscopy (IEM) using Lowicryl K11M embedded normal human skin and patients' sera demonstrated the majority of labelling within the lamina densa, not below the lamina densa. We conclude that EBA autoantibodies in these patient's sera bind to the NC-1 domain of collagen VII situated in the lamina densa of the epidermal basement membrane, regardless of the EBA clinical phenotype. This confirms the previous notion that anchoring fibrils originate and terminate in the lamina densa.

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