Introduction: Patients with tuberculosis (TB) frequently produce anti-citrullinated protein antibodies (ACPA). The objective of this study is to characterize the citrulline-dependence of the ACPA reactivity in sera of patients with mycobacterium infections.
Methods: Serum samples of 134 patients with untreated mycobacterium infections (122 TB, 12 nontuberculous mycobacterium) were tested for antibodies against both the citrullinated (Cit) and the non-citrullinated (Arg) form of 2 cyclic synthetic peptides. In 33 patients, a follow-up sample was tested six months after starting anti-mycobacterial drugs.
Results: A substantial proportion of patients with mycobacterial infections demonstrated antibodies against 0401Cit, 0401Arg, 0722Cit and 0722Arg. Fourteen patients demonstrated anti-0401Cit, 83 anti-0401Arg, 22 anti-0722Cit and 61 anti-0722Arg, while none of these antibodies were detected in the 20 healthy controls. All the patients but one, who were anti-0401Cit and anti-0722Cit positive, demonstrated reactivity against the respective Arg peptide. In the subset of 33 patients with a follow-up test six months after starting treatment, the mean levels of antibodies to 0401Cit, 0401Arg, 0722Cit and 0722Arg significantly decreased after treatment. All the patients who were anti-0401Cit and anti-0722Cit positive turned negative after treatment. The presence of anti-0401Cit/Arg and anti-0722Cit/Arg was found to be significantly correlated with the presence of HIV.
Conclusions: ACPA may be found in patients with TB. In most of the cases, the reactivity is citrulline independent. A positive cyclic citrullinated peptide (CCP) test in these patients should therefore be interpreted with care, and preferably followed by a control ELISA with a non-citrullinated antigen.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2875640 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/ar2913 | DOI Listing |
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