Hu antigen specificities of ANNA-I autoantibodies in paraneoplastic neurological disease

PH King, D Redden, JS Palmgren, LB Nabors… - Journal of …, 1999 - Elsevier
PH King, D Redden, JS Palmgren, LB Nabors, VA Lennon
Journal of autoimmunity, 1999Elsevier
Despite a broad clinical spectrum, paraneoplastic enecephalomyelitis/sensory
neuronopathy (PEM/SSN) is characterized by the presence of a common autoantibody,
referred to as anti-Hu or type I anti-neuronal nuclear antibody (ANNA-1). The target of these
antibodies is a family of four Hu antigens: three (Hel-N1, HuC, HuD) are neural-specific,
while the fourth (HuR) is ubiquitous. Here, we have analysed by enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assay (ELISA) the immunoreactivity of all four Hu antigens in serum from 75 …
Despite a broad clinical spectrum, paraneoplastic enecephalomyelitis/sensory neuronopathy (PEM/SSN) is characterized by the presence of a common autoantibody, referred to as anti-Hu or type I anti-neuronal nuclear antibody (ANNA-1). The target of these antibodies is a family of four Hu antigens: three (Hel-N1, HuC, HuD) are neural-specific, while the fourth (HuR) is ubiquitous. Here, we have analysed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) the immunoreactivity of all four Hu antigens in serum from 75 patients with ANNA-1 autoantibodies and looked for clinical correlations. IgG in all the patients' sera bound to each of the four antigens, and the titers correlated with those of the ANNA-I immunofluorescence assay. Median titers for the neural-specific antigens (range: 56,892–90,051) were significantly higher than for HuR (36,799). Patients with gastrointestinal dysmotility or subacute sensory neuronopathy had the highest median titers to all four antigens, while patients with sensorineural deafness had the lowest titers. The results indicate a heterogeneous immune response to individual Hu antigens in patients with PEM/SSN, and that the titers to these antigens as a group, rather than individually, correlate with clinical profile. Furthermore, these results suggest that ELISA analysis of a single neural-specific Hu antigen is sufficient for serological screening in PEM/SSN.
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