Pathological autoantibody internalisation in myositis.

Iago Pinal-Fernandez,Sandra Muñoz-Braceras,Maria Casal-Dominguez, Katherine Pak,Jiram Torres-Ruiz, Jon Musai, Stefania Dell'Orso,Faiza Naz, Shamima Islam, Gustavo Gutierrez-Cruz, Maria Dolores Cano, Ana Matas-Garcia, Joan Padrosa, Ester Tobias-Baraja,Gloria Garrabou, Iban Aldecoa, Gerard Espinosa,Carmen Pilar Simeon-Aznar,Alfredo Guillen-Del-Castillo,Albert Gil-Vila, Ernesto Trallero-Araguás,Lisa Christopher-Stine,Thomas E Lloyd,Teerin Liewluck,Elie Naddaf,Werner Stenzel,Steven A Greenberg, Josep Maria Grau, Albert Selva-O'Callaghan, Jose Cesar Milisenda,Andrew Lee Mammen

Annals of the rheumatic diseases(2024)

Cited 0|Views0
No score
Abstract
OBJECTIVES:Autoantibodies targeting intracellular proteins are common in various autoimmune diseases. In the context of myositis, the pathologic significance of these autoantibodies has been questioned due to the assumption that autoantibodies cannot enter living muscle cells. This study aims to investigate the validity of this assumption. METHODS:Confocal immunofluorescence microscopy was employed to localise antibodies and other proteins of interest in myositis muscle biopsies. Bulk RNA sequencing was used to examine the transcriptomic profiles of 669 samples, including those from patients with myositis, disease controls and healthy controls. Additionally, antibodies from myositis patients were introduced into cultured myoblasts through electroporation, and their transcriptomic profiles were analysed using RNA sequencing. RESULTS:In patients with myositis autoantibodies, antibodies accumulated inside myofibres in the same subcellular compartment as the autoantigen. Bulk RNA sequencing revealed that muscle biopsies from patients with autoantibodies targeting transcriptional regulators exhibited transcriptomic patterns consistent with dysfunction of the autoantigen. For instance, in muscle biopsies from patients with anti-PM/Scl autoantibodies recognising components of the nuclear RNA exosome complex, an accumulation of divergent transcripts and long non-coding RNAs was observed; these RNA forms are typically degraded by the nuclear RNA exosome complex. Introducing patient antibodies into cultured muscle cells recapitulated the transcriptomic effects observed in human disease. Further supporting evidence suggested that myositis autoantibodies recognising other autoantigens may also disrupt the function of their targets. CONCLUSIONS:This study demonstrates that, in myositis, autoantibodies are internalised into living cells, causing biological effects consistent with the disrupted function of their autoantigen.
More
Translated text
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