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

Characterization of antigenic structures in auto-immune atrophic gastritis with pernicious anaemia. The parietal cell H,K-ATPase and the chief cell pepsinogen are the two major antigens.

Using isolated cells and subcellular fractions from pig gastric mucosa, antigenic structures with specific binding of IgG from sera of patients with auto-immune atrophic gastritis were characterized by means of immunoblotting and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. In immunoblotting experiments using mucosal cells as the antigen source, two dominating bands of 94 and 41 kDa were found. The two major antigens were identified as the H,K-ATPase (94 kDa), which constitutes the parietal cell acid pump, and pepsinogen (41 kDa) located in the chief cells. There was also a small but significant binding of antibodies to a preparation of Na,K-ATPase, an enzyme which is about 60% homologous to H,K-ATPase. Commercial preparations of hog gastric pepsinogen and pepsin bound pernicious anaemia IgG with equal efficacy. When sera from seven patients with the diagnosis pernicious anaemia were tested, all were found to contain auto-antibodies against H,K-ATPase as well as pepsinogen. In intact, isolated H,K-ATPase-containing vesicles the cytosolic part of the ATPase molecule is facing the outside of the vesicles. Both intact and trypsinized vesicles were incubated with patient sera and with a monoclonal antibody against H,K-ATPase. Pernicious anaemia IgG was found to bind to a cytosolic, trypsin-resistant structure, but the binding of the monoclonal antibody was lost upon trypsinization. The present results indicate that intracellular structures of the gastric mucosa, due to cell damage, may be exposed to immune-competent cells, which do not recognize these structures as 'self'.[1]

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