[PDF][PDF] AIRE-deficient patients harbor unique high-affinity disease-ameliorating autoantibodies

S Meyer, M Woodward, C Hertel, P Vlaicu, Y Haque… - Cell, 2016 - cell.com
S Meyer, M Woodward, C Hertel, P Vlaicu, Y Haque, J Kärner, A Macagno, SC Onuoha…
Cell, 2016cell.com
APS1/APECED patients are defined by defects in the autoimmune regulator (AIRE) that
mediates central T cell tolerance to many self-antigens. AIRE deficiency also affects B cell
tolerance, but this is incompletely understood. Here we show that most APS1/APECED
patients displayed B cell autoreactivity toward unique sets of approximately 100 self-
proteins. Thereby, autoantibodies from 81 patients collectively detected many thousands of
human proteins. The loss of B cell tolerance seemingly occurred during antibody affinity …
Summary
APS1/APECED patients are defined by defects in the autoimmune regulator (AIRE) that mediates central T cell tolerance to many self-antigens. AIRE deficiency also affects B cell tolerance, but this is incompletely understood. Here we show that most APS1/APECED patients displayed B cell autoreactivity toward unique sets of approximately 100 self-proteins. Thereby, autoantibodies from 81 patients collectively detected many thousands of human proteins. The loss of B cell tolerance seemingly occurred during antibody affinity maturation, an obligatorily T cell-dependent step. Consistent with this, many APS1/APECED patients harbored extremely high-affinity, neutralizing autoantibodies, particularly against specific cytokines. Such antibodies were biologically active in vitro and in vivo, and those neutralizing type I interferons (IFNs) showed a striking inverse correlation with type I diabetes, not shown by other anti-cytokine antibodies. Thus, naturally occurring human autoantibodies may actively limit disease and be of therapeutic utility.
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