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Department of
Microbiology/ Immunology, University of Illinois College of Medicine,
835 South Wolcott Avenue (M/C 790), Chicago, IL 60612, USA
Correspondence to: Dr Teodorescu Email: oana{at}uic.edu
Accepted for publication 23 December 1999
OBJECTIVE
To determine
whether the reaction of rheumatoid factor (RF) with solid phase histone
is due to the simultaneous presence of circulating immune complexes
(CICs) or aggregated IgG.
METHODS
Serum samples
from 56 patients with seropositive rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and 50 random blood bank donors were used. Binding of immunoglobulins to
histone was determined by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and
by western blots. Aggregated IgG was obtained by heating at
61oC for 30 minutes.
RESULTS
Among the RA
sera tested by ELISA, 54% were positive for histone binding by IgM,
IgG, or IgA and 20% by IgM only. Heating of normal sera caused a
significant enhancement in the binding of IgG to histone (p<0.001).
This binding had a non-cognate behaviour
that is, it was destroyed by
pepsin treatment of serum and was not significantly inhibited by
competition with free histone. The same behaviour was seen for IgM,
IgG, and IgA binding from RA sera. However, cognate IgG antibody
binding to histone was inhibited by free histone and was resistant to
pepsin digestion. Addition of heat aggregated IgG to RA sera or
pretreatment of histone with aggregated IgG caused a significant
increase in IgM binding to histone.
CONCLUSION
IgM, IgG,
and IgA RF bind to solid phase histone as a result of attachment to
histone of immune complexes or aggregated IgG and not as a result of a
cognate reaction with histone.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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