Lack of evidence of stimulatory autoantibodies to platelet‐derived growth factor receptor in patients with systemic sclerosis

Jean-François Classen(de Duve Institute), Dan Henrohn(Uppsala University Hospital), Fredrik Rorsman(Uppsala University Hospital), Johan Lennartsson(Uppsala University), Bernard Lauwerys(UCLouvain), Gerhard Wikström(Uppsala University Hospital), Charlotte Rorsman(Uppsala University), Sandrine Lenglez(de Duve Institute), Karin Franck‐Larsson(Uppsala University Hospital), Jean‐Paul Tomasi(UCLouvain), Olle Kämpe(Uppsala University Hospital), Marie Vanthuyne(UCLouvain), Frédéric Houssiau(UCLouvain), Jean‐Baptiste Demoulin(de Duve Institute)
Arthritis & Rheumatism
March 30, 2009
Cited by 94

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is a severe connective tissue disease of unknown etiology, characterized by fibrosis of the skin and multiple internal organs. Recent findings suggested that the disease is driven by stimulatory autoantibodies to platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR), which stimulate the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and collagen by fibroblasts. These results opened novel avenues of research into the diagnosis and treatment of SSc. The present study was undertaken to confirm the presence of anti-PDGFR antibodies in patients with SSc. METHODS: Immunoglobulins from 37 patients with SSc were purified by protein A/G chromatography. PDGFR activation was tested using 4 different sensitive bioassays, i.e., cell proliferation, ROS production, signal transduction, and receptor phosphorylation; the latter was also tested in a separate population of 7 patients with SSc from a different research center. RESULTS: Purified IgG samples from patients with SSc were positive when tested for antinuclear autoantibodies, but did not specifically activate PDGFRalpha or PDGFRbeta in any of the tests. Cell stimulation with PDGF itself consistently produced a strong signal. CONCLUSION: The present results raise questions regarding the existence of agonistic autoantibodies to PDGFR in SSc.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis