Antibodies to histones in systemic lupus erythematosus: localization of prominent autoantigens on histones H1 and H2B.

AUTOR(ES)
RESUMO

By the technique of immunoblotting we have assessed the ability of sera from 24 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus to bind nuclear proteins. Of the 11 patients who had antibodies to histones, 10 had antibodies to histone H1 and 9 of these also had antibodies to histone H2B. Antibodies to the other histones (H2A, H3, and H4) were less apparent. Five of the 11 patients (and two others in the remainder of the sample of 24) also had antibodies to a small number of nonhistone proteins that are probably components of ribonucleoprotein particles, but there was no obvious correlation between the presence of antihistone antibodies and the known antiribonucleoprotein activity of these sera. Separate determinants on H1 and H2B were demonstrated by immunoblotting with affinity-purified anti-H1 and anti-H2B antibodies derived from serum that showed both specificities. The localization of the determinants within the histone polypeptide chains was shown by immunoblotting with large fragments produced by specific proteolytic or chemical cleavage of the histones. The strongest determinant on H1 was located within the COOH-terminal half, with a weaker determinant being present within the NH2-terminal half; the H2B determinant(s) was located entirely within the NH2-terminal half of the molecule. The selectivity with which the antihistone antibodies in systemic lupus erythematosus are produced against the more exposed histones in the nucleosome (and perhaps against the most exposed regions of these histones) is consistent with the involvement of intact chromatin structures as immunogens in this disease.

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