Abstract

To investigate the target antigen(s) recognized during the autoimmune process in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM), we produced human monoclonal antibodies by Epstein-Barr virus transformation of peripheral blood lymphocytes from a large number (n = 50) of newly diagnosed IDDM patients. Screening by indirect immunofluorescence assay, using the RINm5F rat insulinoma cell line and eight other human or rat tumour cell lines, was performed to identify monoclonal antibodies that reacted with either membrane or cytoplasmic antigens. Eighteen IgM monoclonal antibodies reacting with cytoplasmic antigens of RIN cells were obtained; 14 of them also showed a staining of the cytoplasm of various non-beta-cell lines, while four displayed a binding restricted to beta-cells among the panel tested. However, among three monoclonal antibodies reacting with the membrane of RIN cells, one (HMD-1) produced an IgG antibody with a binding restricted to the membrane of beta-cells (RIN, HIT, and normal rat islet cells). The membrane antigens of HMD-1 were identified in Western blotting as proteins with molecular weights of 64 and 70 kD. This antibody had no apparent cytotoxic effect on RIN cells. These data suggest that, apart from 'natural autoantibodies,' it is feasible to obtain human monoclonal antibodies from IDDM patients that bind specifically to the beta-cell cytoplasm or to the beta-cell membrane.

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