J Clin Neuromuscul Dis
September 2016
Objectives: We conducted a retrospective study analyzing the clinical features, laboratory findings, demographics, and long-term prognoses of patients with juvenile inflammatory myopathies to determine possible predictors indicating the use of aggressive immunotherapy and the response to and complications of treatment.
Methods: The medical records of 41 patients with juvenile inflammatory myopathies seen at University of Tennessee-affiliated hospitals in Memphis from 1969 to 2008 were evaluated. Patients' clinical characteristics, laboratory studies, muscle biopsies, and electromyography were reviewed.
Urinary myelin basic protein-like material (MBPLM), so designated because of its immunoreactivity with a polyclonal antibody directed against a cryptic epitope located in residues 83-89 of myelin basic protein (MBP), exists in humans normally but increases in concentration in patients with multiple sclerosis who have progressive disease. Given its possible role in reflecting events of neural tissue destruction occurring in multiple sclerosis, urinary MBPLM is a candidate surrogate marker for this phase of the disease. Previously, it has been demonstrated that p-cresol sulfate (PCS) is the dominant component of MBPLM; however, another component(s) was essential in enabling p-cresol sulfate to have molecular mimicry with MBP peptide 83-89 detected by immunoreactivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUsing hybridoma technology, an IgM monoclonal antibody (mAb), designated as F95, was developed against a deca-citrullinated peptide (DCP) consisting of 10 citrulline residues and a carboxyl Gly-Gly-Cys through which DCP was covalently linked to an activated carrier protein, keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH). Clones were selected on the basis of not reacting with human unmodified and noncitrullinated myelin basic protein (MBP), MBP-C1, but reacting well with human citrullinated MBP (MBP-C8). When tested by ELISA, this mAb demonstrated minimal reactivity with human MBP-C1, varying reactivity with the C2-C5 isomers of human MBP, moderate binding with guinea pig MBP-C8, and strong reactivity with human MBP-C8.
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