Immunoblot and immunoelectronmicroscopic analysis of endemic Tunisian pemphigus.

1999 
Tunisian pemphigus is a newly described form of endemic pemphigus whose clinical, histological and epidemiological characteristics have recently been detailed. The objective of this study was to analyse the binding properties of autoantibodies present in sera from patients with endemic Tunisian pemphigus using immunoblotting and indirect immunoelectron microscopy (IEM). Thirty patients with pemphigus foliaceus (PF) and six with pemphigus vulgaris (PV) seen in the dermatology department of Tunis Hospital between 1992 and 1994 were selected for this study. Seven of 3() (23%) and six of 12 (50% PF sera tested bound to the 160 kDa band of desmoglein 1 when tested on bovine tongue and human epidermal extracts, respectively. Two of six and two of three PV sera tested bound to the 130kDa desmoglein 3 in these two extracts. Immunoblot and indirect IEM showed that 24 of 3() (80%) PF sera contained IgG1, IgG3 or IgG4 antibodies that bound to a 185-kDa polypeptide localized on the desmosomal plaque. This immunological analysis showed that most endemic Tunisian pemphigus sera correspond to PF sera and are characterized by a high frequency of autoantibodies directed against a recently identified 185-kDa antigen of the desmosomal plaque.
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