Abstract
C9 neoantigen immunoreactivity has been found to colocalize with C3 immunoreactivity at the dermal-epidermal junction zone (DEZ) in skin specimens from patients with bullous pemphigoid, lupus erythematosus and dermatitis herpetiformis. The present study was designed to elucidate whether the C9 neoantigen immunoreactivity represents deposition of membrane attack complexes or non-lytic SC5b-9 complexes. Skin specimens from 11 patients with pemphigoid, five patients with discoid lupus erythematosus and from nine patients with dermatitis herpetiformis were studied with immunofluorescence using both monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies against C9 neoantigen and against vitronectin (S-protein), an inhibitor to the membrane attack complex of complement. Specimens from the pemphigoid patients demonstrated C9 neoantigen reactivity along the DEZ without detectable colocalized vitronectin. This suggests deposition of membrane attack complexes in the pemphigoid lesions. Immunoreactivity of both C9 neoantigen and vitronectin was detected in the DEZ in specimens of discoid lupus erythematosus and in the tips of dermal papillae in specimens of dermatitis herpetiformis. The combined presence of C9 neoantigen- and vitronectin immunoreactivity may indicate deposition of C9 as part of the non-lytic SC5b-9 complex. The finding reported here of differential deposition of vitronectin and C9 in different diseases indicates that the presence of C9 neoantigen immunoreactivity in tissue per se does not represent the deposition of membrane attack complexes, but that it may also be C9 deposited as part of the nonlytic SC5b-9 complex.
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