A repertoire of 124 potential autoantigens for autoimmune kidney diseases identified by dermatan sulfate affinity enrichment of kidney tissue proteins Journal Article


Authors: Zhang, W.; Rho, J. H.; Roehrl, M. W.; Roehrl, M. H.; Wang, J. Y.
Article Title: A repertoire of 124 potential autoantigens for autoimmune kidney diseases identified by dermatan sulfate affinity enrichment of kidney tissue proteins
Abstract: Autoantigens are the molecular targets in autoimmune diseases. They are a cohort of seemingly unrelated self-molecules present in different parts of the body, yet they can trigger a similar chain of autoimmune responses such as autoantibody production. We previously reported that dermatan sulfate (DS) can bind self-molecules of dying cells to stimulate autoreactive CD5+ B cells to produce autoantibodies. The formation of autoantigen-DS complexes converts the normally non-antigenic self-molecules to none-self antigens, and thus DS-affinity represents a common underlying biochemical property for autoantigens. This study sought to apply this property to identify potential autoantigens in the kidney. Total proteins were extracted from mouse kidney tissues and loaded onto DS-Sepharose resins. Proteins without affinity were washed off the resins, whereas those with increasing DS-affinity were eluted with step gradients of increasing salt strength. Fractions with strong and moderate DS-affinity were sequenced by mass spectrometry and yielded 25 and 99 proteins, respectively. An extensive literature search was conducted to validate whether these had been previously reported as autoantigens. Of the 124 proteins, 79 were reported autoantigens, and 19 out of 25 of the strong-DS-binding ones were well-known autoantigens. Moreover, these proteins largely fell into the two most common autoantibody categories in autoimmune kidney diseases, including 40 ANA (anti-nuclear autoantibodies) and 25 GBM (glomerular basement membrane) autoantigens. In summary, this study compiles a large repertoire of potential autoantigens for autoimmune kidney diseases. This autoantigen-ome sheds light on the molecular etiology of autoimmunity and further supports our hypothesis DS-autoantigen complexes as a unifying principle of autoantigenicity. © 2019 Zhang et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Keywords: controlled study; unclassified drug; nonhuman; pathophysiology; mass spectrometry; protein analysis; animal cell; mouse; animal tissue; kidney disease; animal experiment; animal model; protein binding; validation study; autoantigen; antinuclear antibody; autoantibody; autoimmune disease; sodium chloride; resin; extraction; sepharose; article; glomerulus basement membrane antibody; kidney tissue; dermatan sulfate; glomerular basement membrane autoantigen; autoimmune kidney disease
Journal Title: PLoS ONE
Volume: 14
Issue: 6
ISSN: 1932-6203
Publisher: Public Library of Science  
Date Published: 2019-06-25
Start Page: e0219018
Language: English
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0219018
PUBMED: 31237920
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC6592568
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Michael H Roehrl
    127 Roehrl