Human retinal S-antigen: T cell epitope mapping in posterior uveitis patients

G. Rai, S. Saxena, H. Kumar, V. K. Singh*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

26 Scopus citations

Abstract

Uveitis, an intraocular inflammatory disease which affects the uveal tract and the retina of the eye in humans, is one of the major causes of visual impairment. Posterior uveitis is often associated with inflammation of the retina and vitreous. Unfortunately, etiological diagnosis of the disease is not possible in the majority of patients. It is generally felt that an autoimmune mechanism may be involved in so-called idiopathic cases. The role of retinal S-antigen, its 20 linear peptides spanning the entire sequence, and 2 additional peptides, known to be uveitopathogenic in experimental animals, was studied in 26 patients with uveitis. Lymphocyte proliferative response was tested in vitro to identify the epitopes of S-antigen involved and to establish their role in the pathogenesis of uveitis. Of 26 uveitis patients tested, 11 showed a significant T cell proliferative response in vitro to at least 1 antigen used. None among the controls showed any response to the peptides or native S-antigen used in this study. We have found that uveitis patients respond most frequently to peptide 4 (61-80), peptide 5 (81-100), peptide 8 (141-160), peptide 9 (161-180), peptide 12 (221-240), and peptide 13 (241-260) of the human S-antigen. These results further confirm that autoimmunity to retinal S-antigen may play a role in the etiopathogenesis of a subset of patients with idiopathic uveitis.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)140-145
Number of pages6
JournalExperimental and Molecular Pathology
Volume70
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 2001

Keywords

  • Lymphocyte proliferation
  • Retinal S-antigen
  • T cell epitope
  • Uveitis

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