Primary Biliary Cirrhosis: Antigenic Specificity of IgM-Type Mitochondrial Antibodies Analyzed by Immunoblotting and ELISA

Abstract
The antigenic reactivities of circulating IgM- and IgG-type antimitochondrial antibodies (AMA) from 18 patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) were compared by the use of immunoblotting and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). In immunoblotting, the binding patterns of IgM and IgG were very similar when F1-ATPase and mitochondria were used as antigens. The major PBC-specific IgM-reactive antigen was identical with the dominating IgG-reactive antigen, sharing the same molecular weight of 70 kD and the same requirement for reduced thiol groups for expression of antigenicity. Other PBC-related mitochondrial proteins with variable antigenicity had the molecular weights of 60 and 43 kD. Depending on the IgM and IgG reactions in F1-ELISA, PBC patients can be grouped into three categories: patients with IgG and IgM (12/18), IgG alone (5/18) and IgM alone (1/18). By serum fractionation, the IgM reactivity was shown to be a true PBC-related antibody antigen reaction, and not due to interference of rheumatoid factors.