Publication | Open Access
Autoantibody to heat-shock protein 90 can mediate protection against systemic candidosis.
151
Citations
26
References
1991
Year
Fungal Cell BiologyImmunologyHeat-shock Protein 90Clinical MycologyImmunotherapyHost ResponseYeastImmunopathologyMouse ModelSystemic CandidosisAutoimmune DiseaseAntifungal AgentsAutoimmunityImmune FunctionFungal PathogenAntifungal AgentPathogenesisMicrobiologyMedicineEpitope Mapping ShowsConserved Epitopes
Epitope mapping shows that patients recovering from systemic infection with Candida albicans produce antibodies against both fungal-specific and conserved epitopes of the heat-shock protein (hsp) 90. In a mouse model of systemic candidosis, mortality was halved by prior administration of sera from two infected patients containing antibodies to hsp 90. One of these patients had no other candidal antibodies detectable on immunoblotting. The protective effect was mediated by the immunoglobulin fraction of the immune serum. It was not observed with a normal human serum. A mouse monoclonal antibody raised against one of the conserved peptide epitopes suggested that an autoantibody to hsp 90 could mediate protection against systemic candidosis in the animal model.
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