Elsevier

The Lancet

Volume 339, Issue 8796, 28 March 1992, Pages 770-773
The Lancet

ORIGINAL ARTICLES
Identification by molecular cloning of an autoantigen associated with Addison's disease as steroid 17α-hydroxylase

https://doi.org/10.1016/0140-6736(92)91894-EGet rights and content

Abstract

Idiopathic Addison's disease is characterised by a progressive failure in the synthesis of all classes of steroid hormones and by an immune response against the steroid-producing cells of the adrenal cortex; the nature of the adrenal autoantigens is not known. We have used molecular cloning and sequencing to identify the target antigens. We screened a human fetal adrenal cDNA expression library in λ gt11 vector with serum samples from patients with Addison's disease as part of the type 1 polyendocrine autoimmunity syndrome. Samples from 3 patients, which had precipitating antibodies against two adrenal proteins detected by immuno-diffusion and against five adrenal proteins of molecular mass 55, 48, 43, 39, and 19 kDa as judged by immunoblotting, were used to identify 60 immunoreactive clones. 39 of these were subcloned, inserted into the M13mp10 vector, and sequenced by the dideoxy method or identified by Southern and dot-blot hybridisation. All but 1 of the inserts showed more than 98·8% homology with the published sequence of steroid 17α-hydroxylase. This protein was expressed by insertion of 1 of the clones into the pG EM EX-1 vector. Only serum from patients with Addison's disease and type 1 polyendocrine autoimmunity syndrome that reacted with the 55 kDa adrenal protein recognised the recombinant 17α-hydroxylase protein on immunoblotting. Our results show that one of the key enzymes in steroid biosynthesis, 17α-hydroxylase, is an autoantigen involved in the pathogenesis of adrenocortical failure.

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