Publications by authors named "M V Shpilevaya"

Pemphigus vulgaris is a severe, socially significant autoimmune disease associated with autoantibodies to the desmoglein 3 antigen. The disease affects all age groups, beginning at 18 years of age; the mortality rate of pemphigus can reach as high as 50%, depending on a patient's age and a number of other factors. There is no highly selective or personalized therapy for pemphigus vulgaris at the moment.

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Article Synopsis
  • A new method has been created to analyze the specificity of auto-reactive antibodies targeting desmoglein 3 (Dsg3) in pemphigus vulgaris patients using a competitive ELISA.
  • This method involves a two-stage process where auto-reactive antibodies are initially removed before measuring the remaining antibodies against the full Dsg3 domain.
  • The technique may help in personalizing treatment for patients through plasmapheresis by tailoring the immunosorbent used in therapy.
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Using the recombinant second fragment of the extracellular domain (EC2) of human desmoglein type 3 (Dsg3) as an affinity ligand, an immunosorbent was obtained that selectively binds autoreactive antibodies to this domain from the immune sera of patients with pemphigus. The EC2 protein was obtained in the form of a fusion protein with the Fc-fragment of human IgG1. The production was carried out in CHO cells using the method of transient expression.

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Immunochips containing 12 recombinant antigens of T. pallidum (Тр15, Тр17, Тр47, TmpA, Тр0163, Тр0277, Тр0319, Тр0453, Тр0684, Тр0965, Тр0971, and Тр1038) were prepared to assay for IgG and IgM in serum samples (n=68) of healthy individuals and patients with the latent stages of syphilis. The linear discriminant analysis of detected IgG and IgM differentiated three groups of serum samples as 1) early latent syphilis; 2) seroresistant early latent syphilis; and 3) late latent syphilis with overall differentiation potency of 95.

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The aim of the study was to investigate the characteristics of immunoarrays (microarrays) produced by co-polymerization immobilization and non-contact printing techniques for enhancing the capacities of syphilis diagnostics. In diagnostic context immunoarrays of both protein immobilization techniques have shown high sensitivity and specificity together with potency to differentiate syphilis stages in serologic assays. The article discloses the advantages and limitations of non-contact printing techniques as well as the results and problems revealed in the study.

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