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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Autoantibodies to the transcriptional factor SOX13 in primary biliary cirrhosis compared with other diseases.

The molecule SOX13 was initially identified as an autoantigen (ICA12) in Type 1 diabetes. SOX13 is a member of the SOX family of transcriptional regulatory proteins that contain a high mobility group (HMG) motif with structural similarity to HMG proteins 1 and 2. Antibodies to HMG 1 and 2 occur in autoimmune diseases of the liver and in ulcerative colitis. We measured the occurrence and levels of anti-SOX13 by radioimmunoprecipitation in primary biliary cirrhosis ( PBC) and other diseases, and compared frequencies with anti-HMG measured by ELISA. Anti-SOX13 was detected in 18% of patients with PBC, 13% with autoimmune hepatitis, 18% with Type 1 diabetes, at lower frequencies in other conditions including the multisystem autoimmune diseases, systemic lupus erythematosus and rheumatoid arthritis, and in 1% of normal sera. Anti-HMG1 and anti-HMG2 occurred at frequencies of 30% and 35% respectively in PBC. Serum levels of anti-SOX13 and anti-HMG correlated significantly for PBC although not for Type 1 diabetes. Anti-SOX13 in PBC may occur merely as an immune response to products of damage to parenchymal tissue, or may be illustrative of a general proclivity of transcriptional regulatory proteins to elicit autoimmune responses.[1]

References

  1. Autoantibodies to the transcriptional factor SOX13 in primary biliary cirrhosis compared with other diseases. Fida, S., Myers, M.A., Whittingham, S., Rowley, M.J., Ozaki, S., Mackay, I.R. J. Autoimmun. (2002) [Pubmed]
 
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