Detection of antibody to sialyl-i, a possible antigen in patients with Meniere's disease.

BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA-MOLECULAR BASIS OF DISEASE(2000)

Cited 11|Views11
No score
Abstract
An autoimmune hypothesis for the etiology of Meniere's disease has been proposed. In this study, we focused on gangliosides as potential antigens for autoantibodies in Meniere's disease patients. In an attempt to investigate ganglioside antigens which respond to the serum of patients with Meniere's disease, we analyzed gangliosides of human acoustic neurinomas, and used them as antigens to broadly explore gangliosides that react to serum. All the acoustic neurinoma samples used in the present study showed a similar ganglioside profile on TLC (thin-layer chromatography). For the microscale ganglioside analysis, a newly developed TLC blotting/secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) system together with TLC immunostaining method was employed. Most of the ganglioside bands could be analyzed, and they were identified as GM3, GM2, SPG, CM1a, GD3, S-i (sialyl-i ganglioside) and GD1a. GD1a was the predominant ganglioside and many neolactoseries gangliosides were recognized by immunological analysis. Next, the immune reactivity of serum samples, from patients with Meniere's disease, with the acoustic neurinoma gangliosides was studied by TLC immunostaining. The result showed that five of 11 patients with Meniere's disease and one of eight normal subjects reacted with a specific band, which was identified as S-i by the TLC blotting/SIMS system. The findings of the present study indicate that S-i ganglioside is an autoantigen and possibly involved in the pathogenesis of Meniere's disease. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
More
Translated text
Key words
Meniere's disease,ganglioside,acoustic neurinoma
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined