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Detection of antibodies to human nerve antigens in sera from leprosy patients by ELISA.

Abstract

Anti-neural antibodies have been implicated to play a role in the pathogenesis of nerve damage in leprosy patients. To find the relationship between anti-neural antibodies and clinical findings, we attempted to detect antibodies against neurofilament-enriched proteins by ELISA in sera from leprosy patients. Of 289 sera from leprosy patients, 74 (25.6%) had significant anti-neural antibodies; in contrast, 1 (5.0%) of 20 tuberculosis patients and 11 (7.1%) of 154 controls were seroreactive to nerve antigen. When clinical types were considered, a significant level of anti-neural IgG antibodies was detectable in 53 (30.1%) of 176 sera from lepromatous patients compared with 21 (18.6%) of 113 sera from tuberculoid patients, indicating that lepromatous patients were more likely to be seropositive to nerve antigens in ELISA. Some of the ELISA-reactive sera showed antibody reactivity with 38-kD, 40-kD and 43-kD nerve antigens in Western blotting analysis. There was no apparent correlation between seroreactivity to nerve antigens and bacterial load in leprosy patients. Although there was no statistical significance, anti-neural antibodies were detectable more often among the patients on chemotherapy than the untreated and among the patients with erythema nodosum leprosum than without. The results, therefore, suggest that anti-neural antibodies are elicited during the course of leprosy and may be associated with the extensiveness of nerve involvement in the patients.

More information

Type
Journal Article
Author
Park J Y
Cho S N
Youn J K
Kim D I
Cellona R V
Fajardo T T
Walsh G P
Kim J D

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