Diao J, Michalak T I
Molecular Virology and Hepatology Research, Division of Basic Medical Sciences, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, Canada.
Hepatology. 1997 Mar;25(3):689-96. doi: 10.1002/hep.510250333.
The relationship between hepatitis virus invasion and emergence of liver-specific autoantibodies against asialoglycoprotein receptor (anti-ASGPR) and the occurrence patterns, prognostic value, and specificity of these autoantibodies toward polypeptides of host ASGPR were investigated in experimental viral hepatitis in the woodchuck system. Sequential sera (n = 231) obtained before and after inoculation with woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV) from animals which resolved acute infection (n = 7) or developed chronic hepatitis (n = 6) were tested for anti-ASGPR using radio and enzyme-immunodetection assays. In addition, the outcome of WHV hepatitis was analyzed in 30 other woodchucks whose preinoculation sera were tested for anti-ASGPR. The receptor subunit specificity of virus-induced anti-ASGPR was determined by Western blotting and compared with that of anti-ASGPR raised in woodchucks challenged with a heterologous (rabbit) receptor. The results revealed that WHV infection triggered anti-ASGPR in all except one of the initially autoantibody nonreactive animals (eight of nine; 89.9%). Once induced, anti-ASGPR were detectable throughout the entire follow-up independent of histological severity of liver damage or the outcome of hepatitis. In healthy WHV-naive woodchucks, anti-ASGPR occurred at low titers in approximately one third of the animals. Importantly, woodchucks reactive for anti-ASGPR before WHV inoculation developed chronic hepatitis with a significantly greater frequency (55.5%) than those autoantibody negative (15.6%; P < .05). In contrast to anti-ASGPR elicited by immunization with a heterologous receptor, which initially recognized only the ASGPR 40-kd polypeptide, anti-ASGPR emerging after virus invasion reacted with both the ASGPR 40- and 47-kd subunits from the moment of their appearance. This study provides the first direct evidence that hepatitis virus in the natural host triggers autoantibodies against a unique hepatocyte antigen and shows that anti-ASGPR autoimmunity existing before virus infection is associated with a high rate of progression to chronic disease in experimental hepadnaviral hepatitis.
在土拨鼠系统的实验性病毒性肝炎中,研究了肝炎病毒入侵与抗去唾液酸糖蛋白受体(抗ASGPR)这一肝脏特异性自身抗体的出现之间的关系,以及这些自身抗体对宿主ASGPR多肽的发生模式、预后价值和特异性。使用放射免疫检测和酶免疫检测法,对7只急性感染已愈(n = 7)或发展为慢性肝炎(n = 6)的动物在接种土拨鼠肝炎病毒(WHV)前后获得的系列血清(n = 231)进行抗ASGPR检测。此外,对另外30只土拨鼠的WHV肝炎结果进行了分析,这些土拨鼠接种前的血清进行了抗ASGPR检测。通过蛋白质印迹法确定病毒诱导的抗ASGPR的受体亚基特异性,并与用异源(兔)受体攻击的土拨鼠产生的抗ASGPR的特异性进行比较。结果显示,在最初自身抗体无反应的动物中,除1只外,所有动物(9只中的8只;89.9%)在感染WHV后均触发了抗ASGPR。一旦诱导产生,抗ASGPR在整个随访过程中均可检测到,与肝脏损伤的组织学严重程度或肝炎结局无关。在未感染WHV的健康土拨鼠中,约三分之一的动物抗ASGPR呈低滴度出现。重要的是,在接种WHV前抗ASGPR呈反应性的土拨鼠发展为慢性肝炎的频率(55.5%)明显高于自身抗体阴性的土拨鼠(15.6%;P < 0.05)。与用异源受体免疫产生的抗ASGPR不同,后者最初仅识别40-kd的ASGPR多肽,病毒入侵后出现的抗ASGPR从出现之时起就与40-kd和47-kd的ASGPR亚基发生反应。本研究提供了首个直接证据,即自然宿主中的肝炎病毒可触发针对独特肝细胞抗原的自身抗体,并表明病毒感染前存在的抗ASGPR自身免疫与实验性乙肝病毒肝炎发展为慢性病的高发生率相关。