Publication | Open Access
Antibodies against human cytochrome P-450db1 in autoimmune hepatitis type II.
238
Citations
30
References
1988
Year
ImmunologyPathologyCytochrome P-450db1Autoimmune Liver DiseaseViral HepatitisBioanalysisPolymorphic Cytochrome P-450db1Cytochrome P-450 IsozymesImmunochemistryAutoantibodiesHepatotoxicityProteomicsAutoimmune DiseaseBiochemistryLiver PhysiologyAutoimmunityMetabolomicsDrug-induced Liver InjuryHuman Cytochrome P-450db1HepatologyNatural SciencesHepatitisLiver DiseaseLiverMedicineHepatocellular Carcinoma
In a subgroup of children with chronic active hepatitis, circulating autoantibodies occur that bind to liver and kidney endoplasmic reticulum (anti-liver/kidney microsome antibody type I or anti-LKM1). Anti-LKM1 titers follow the severity of the disease and the presence of these antibodies serves as a diagnostic marker for this autoimmune hepatitis type II. We demonstrate that anti-LKM1 IgGs specifically inhibit the hydroxylation of bufuralol in human liver microsomes. Using two assay systems with different selectivity for the two cytochrome P-450 isozymes catalyzing bufuralol metabolism in human liver, we show that anti-LKM1 exclusively recognizes cytochrome P-450db1. Immunopurification of the LKM1 antigen from solubilized human liver microsomes resulted in an electrophoretically homogenous protein that had the same molecular mass (50 kDa) as purified P-450db1 and an identical N-terminal amino acid sequence. Recognition of both purified P-450db1 and the immunoisolated protein on western blots by several monoclonal antibodies confirmed the identity of the LKM1 antigen with cytochrome P-450db1. Cytochrome P-450db1 has been identified as the target of a common genetic polymorphism of drug oxidation. However, the relationship between the polymorphic cytochrome P-450db1 and the appearance of anti-LKM1 autoantibodies as well as their role in the pathogenesis of chronic active hepatitis remains speculative.
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