Antibody selection against CD52 produces a paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria phenotype in human lymphocytes by a novel mechanism
- 15 March 1997
- journal article
- Published by Portland Press Ltd. in Biochemical Journal
- Vol. 322 (3) , 919-925
- https://doi.org/10.1042/bj3220919
Abstract
The CD52 antigen is a lymphocyte glycoprotein with an extremely short polypeptide backbone and a single N-linked glycan, and it is attached to the cell membrane by a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor. Treatment of rheumatoid arthritis patients with CAMPATH-1H, a humanized monoclonal antibody against CD52, resulted, in a small number of cases, in the appearance and persistence of CD52-negative T cells. Similarly, CD52-negative B cells emerged following in vitro treatment of a CD52-positive human B cell line with CAMPATH-1H. Both the B and T CD52-negative cells were also found to be defective in surface expression of other GPI-anchored proteins. Biochemical analysis revealed a severe defect in the synthesis of a mature GPI precursor in both the B and T cell lines. Therefore the phenotype of these CD52-negative B and T cells closely resembles that of lymphocytes from patients with paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria (PNH), in which the first step of the GPI-biosynthetic pathway, i.e. synthesis of GlcNAc-phosphatidylinositol, is blocked. In all cases studied to date, this defect maps to a mutation of the phosphatidylinositolglycan class A (PIG-A) structural gene. We therefore amplified the PIG-A gene from both the GPI-negative B and T cells by PCR and determined the nucleotide sequence. No differences from the wild-type sequence were detected; therefore a classical PNH mutation cannot be responsible for the GPI-biosynthesis defect in these cell lines. Significantly, the GPI-negative phenotype of the B cells was reversible upon separation of the positive and negative cells, resulting in a redistribution to a mixed population with either CD52-positive or -negative cells, whereas populations of 100% CD52-negative T cells were stably maintained during culture. Therefore, whereas the GPI-biosynthesis deficiency in the T cell lines may be due to a mutation in another gene required by the GPI-biosynthetic pathway, the reversible nature of this block in the B cell lines suggests a less direct cause, possibly an alteration in a regulatory factor. Overall, these data demonstrate that the PNH phenotype can be generated without a mutation in the PIG-A structural gene, and thereby identify a novel mechanism for the development of GPI deficiency.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Emergence of CD52 −, glycosyiphosphatidylinositol-anchor deficient lymphocytes in rheumatoid arthritis patients following Campath-1H treatmentInternational Immunology, 1996
- Emergence of CD52-, phosphatidylinositolglycan-anchor-deficient T lymphocytes after in vivo application of Campath-1H for refractory B- cell non-Hodgkin lymphomaBlood, 1995
- Primary Structure of CD52Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1995
- Somatic mutations of the PIG-A gene found in Japanese patients with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuriaBlood, 1995
- Concomitant increases in galectin-1 and its glycoconjugate ligands (carcinoembryonic antigen, lamp-1, and lamp-2) in cultured human colon carcinoma cells by sodium butyrate.1994
- Correction of a Defect in Mammalian GPI Anchor Biosynthesis by a Transfected Yeast GeneScience, 1990
- Glycolipid precursors for the membrane anchor of Trypanosoma brucei variant surface glycoproteins. I. Can structure of the phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C sensitive and resistant glycolipids.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1990
- The CAMPATH‐1 antigen (CDw52)Tissue Antigens, 1990
- Paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria.1985
- Cell-surface-antigen mutants of haematopoietic cells. Tools to study differentiation, biosynthesis and functionBiochemical Journal, 1985