Immunoadsorption against two distinct epitopes on human type XVII collagen abolishes dermal-epidermal separation inducedin vitroby autoantibodies from pemphigoid gestationis patients

Abstract
Pemphigoid gestationis (PG) is a subepidermal autoimmune blistering disease characterized by self-reactive T and B cells specific for the transmembrane hemidesmosomal protein type XVII collagen/BP180. Major T and B cell epitopes are located within the immunodominant 16th non-collagenous domain A (NC16A) of type XVII collagen. The aim of the present study was to map the pathogenically relevant epitopes targeted by blister-inducing patients’ autoantibodies. For this purpose, we used an in vitro model of autoantibody-induced leukocyte-dependent dermal-epidermal separation. Pre-adsorption against a recombinant form of the NC16A region abolished the blister-inducing potential of autoantibodies from all PG patients. Using overlapping synthetic peptides, we demonstrated that PG autoantibodies bind to two defined epitopes within the NC16A region (aa 500–514 and aa 511–523). Importantly, pre-adsorption using an affinity matrix containing these epitopes completely abolished dermal-epidermal separation induced by PG autoantibodies. This study identifies the epitopes relevant for blister induction in PG and should facilitate the development of an antigen-specific immunoadsorption therapy for this disease.

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