Abstract

SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western blotting for antibodies reactive with a 64 kDa protein in pig eye muscle membrane was carried out in patients with lid lag and retraction, but no other signs of ophthalmopathy, associated with thyroid disease or nonimmunologic goiter and in patients with Graves' hyperthyroidism without ophthalmopathy who were studied prospectively to determine the relationship of eye muscle antibodies to clinical features of the ophthalmopathy as they appeared in this group of predisposed patients. Seventy-one percent of euthyroid patients with lid lag and retraction but no established ophthalmopathy had detectable serum antibodies to a 64 kDa eye muscle membrane protein. Much smaller proportions had antibodies to proteins of other MW. In normal subjects with previously detectable antibodies to a 64 kDa protein, serum titers, determined by carrying out immunoblotting at serum dilutions of 1:25-1:6400, were low (< or = 1:100) in all cases tested. On the other hand, titers were higher (1:200-1:6400) in 16 of 22 patients with established ophthalmopathy and in 5 of 7 patients with lid lag and retraction tested. Titers tended to be lower in patients with ophthalmopathy of > or = 3 years duration than in those of < or = 1 year duration. Antibody titers were low (1:25) in 6 of 7 patients with Graves' hyperthyroidism without evident eye disease tested. Antibodies to a 64 kDa eye muscle membrane protein were predictive of the development of ophthalmopathy in patients with Graves' hyperthyroidism studied prospectively for periods of 8-42 months.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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