Mihara S, Suzuki N, Takeba Y, Soejima K, Yamamoto S
Department of Immunology, St. Marianna University School of Medicine, Kawasaki, Kanagawa, Japan.
Clin Exp Immunol. 2002 Aug;129(2):359-69. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2249.2002.01812.x.
We have reported previously that circulating anti-Fas ligand (FasL) autoantibodies able to inhibit Fas/FasL-mediated apoptosis were present in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). In the present study, we describe the epitopes recognized by these anti-FasL autoantibodies. Rabbit antihuman antibody, raised against a FasL fragment consisting of amino acids (aa) 103-179 (fragment 2.0), inhibited Fas/FasL-mediated apoptosis, whereas an antibody against a FasL aa 103-146 fragment (fragment 1.0) did not. This suggested that an epitope around aa 146-179 was important for Fas/FasL interaction. Epitope mapping of anti-FasL autoantibodies using deletion mutants indicated that the epitope was located around aa 163-179. Three-dimensional molecular modelling of the Fas/FasL complex revealed that the aa 162-169 region was located on the outermost side of FasL, which suggested that the anti-FasL autoantibody would easily have access to the epitope. FasL point mutants involving aa positions 162-169 resulted in complete loss of apoptosis-inducing capability, which suggested that the aa 162-169 region was important for Fas/FasL interaction. A synthetic FasL peptide consisting of aa 161-170 blocked the binding of anti-FasL autoantibodies to FasL fragment 2.0 (aa 103-179). The FasL aa 161-170 sequence was found to be highly homologous with aa sequences from several infectious agents. Synthetic peptides derived from some of these microorganisms cross-reacted with the epitope recognized by the autoantibodies, suggesting that several foreign infectious agent-derived proteins may share an epitope with human FasL. As lymphocytes from SLE patients aberrartly expressed FasL, it is possible that infection by one of several infectious agents may trigger cross-reactive antibody responses, after which aberrantly expressed endogenous FasL might induce the shift from a cross-reactive response to an authentic autoimmune response. Therefore, a combination of molecular mimicry and aberrant autoantigen expression may be important for the development of anti-FasL autoantibodies in SLE patients.
我们之前曾报道,系统性红斑狼疮(SLE)患者体内存在能够抑制Fas/FasL介导的细胞凋亡的循环抗Fas配体(FasL)自身抗体。在本研究中,我们描述了这些抗FasL自身抗体所识别的表位。用针对由氨基酸(aa)103 - 179组成的FasL片段(片段2.0)制备的兔抗人抗体可抑制Fas/FasL介导的细胞凋亡,而针对FasL aa 103 - 146片段(片段1.0)的抗体则不能。这表明aa 146 - 179附近的一个表位对于Fas/FasL相互作用很重要。使用缺失突变体对抗FasL自身抗体进行表位作图表明该表位位于aa 163 - 179附近。Fas/FasL复合物的三维分子模型显示aa 162 - 169区域位于FasL的最外侧,这表明抗FasL自身抗体能够轻易接近该表位。涉及aa位置162 - 169的FasL点突变导致诱导细胞凋亡能力完全丧失,这表明aa 162 - 169区域对于Fas/FasL相互作用很重要。由aa 161 - 170组成的合成FasL肽可阻断抗FasL自身抗体与FasL片段2.0(aa 103 - 179)的结合。发现FasL aa 161 - 170序列与几种感染因子的aa序列高度同源。源自其中一些微生物的合成肽与自身抗体识别的表位发生交叉反应,这表明几种外源感染因子衍生的蛋白质可能与人类FasL共享一个表位。由于SLE患者的淋巴细胞异常表达FasL,有可能几种感染因子之一的感染会触发交叉反应性抗体应答,在此之后异常表达的内源性FasL可能会诱导从交叉反应性应答向真正自身免疫应答的转变。因此,分子模拟和异常自身抗原表达的结合可能对于SLE患者抗FasL自身抗体的产生很重要。