The Transcription Factors SOX9 and SOX10 Are Vitiligo Autoantigens in Autoimmune Polyendocrine Syndrome Type I

Håkan Hedstrand(Uppsala University Hospital), Olov Ekwall(Uppsala University Hospital), Mats J. Olsson(Uppsala University Hospital), Eva Landgren(Uppsala University Hospital), E. Helen Kemp(Northern General Hospital), Anthony P. Weetman(Northern General Hospital), Jaakko Perheentupa(University of Helsinki), Eystein S. Husebye(Haukeland University Hospital), Jan Gustafsson(Uppsala University Hospital), Corrado Betterle(University of Padua), Olle Kämpe(Uppsala University Hospital), Fredrik Rorsman(Uppsala University Hospital)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
September 1, 2001
Cited by 152Open Access
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Abstract

Vitiligo is common in the hereditary disorder autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type I (APS I). Patients with APS I are known to have high titer autoantibodies directed against various tissue-specific antigens. Using sera from APS I patients for immunoscreening of a cDNA library from human scalp, we identified the transcription factors SOX9 and SOX10 as novel autoantigens related to this syndrome. Immunoreactivity against SOX9 was found in 14 (15%) and against SOX10 in 20 (22%) of the 91 APS I sera studied. All patients reacting with SOX9 displayed reactivity against SOX10, suggesting shared epitopes. Among the 19 patients with vitiligo, 12 (63%) were positive for SOX10 (p < 0.0001). Furthermore, three of 93 sera from patients with vitiligo unrelated to APS I showed strong reactivity against SOX10, which may indicate a more general role of SOX10 as an autoantigen in vitiligo.


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