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Circulating antibodies against nicotinic acetylcholine receptors in chagasic patients

Summary Human and experimental Chagas' disease causes peripheral nervous system damage involving neuromuscular transmission alterations at the neuromuscular junction. Additionally, autoantibodies directed to peripheral nerves and sarcolemmal proteins of skeletal muscle have been described. In t...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Clinical and experimental immunology 1997-11, Vol.110 (2), p.219-225
Main Authors: GOIN, J. C., VENERA, G., BONINO, M. BISCOGLIO DE JIMÉNEZ, STERIN‐BORDA, L.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Summary Human and experimental Chagas' disease causes peripheral nervous system damage involving neuromuscular transmission alterations at the neuromuscular junction. Additionally, autoantibodies directed to peripheral nerves and sarcolemmal proteins of skeletal muscle have been described. In this work, we analyse the ability of serum immunoglobulin factors associated with human chagasic infection to bind the affinity‐purified nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) from electric organs of Discopyge tschudii and to identify the receptor subunits involved in the interaction. The frequency of serum anti‐nAChR reactivity assayed by dot‐blot was higher in seropositive chagasic patients than in uninfected subjects. Purified IgG obtained from chagasic patients immunoprecipitated a significantly higher fraction of the solubilized nAChR than normal IgG. Furthermore, immunoblotting assays indicated that α and β are the main subunits involved in the interaction. Chagasic IgG was able to inhibit the binding of α‐bungarotoxin to the receptor in a concentration‐dependent manner, confirming the contribution of the α‐subunit in the autoantibody‐receptor interaction. The presence of anti‐nAChR antibodies was detected in 73% of chagasic patients with impairment of neuromuscular transmission in conventional electromyographical studies, indicating a strong association between seropositive reactivity against nAChR and electromyographical abnormalities in chagasic patients. The chronic binding of these autoantibodies to the nAChR could induce a decrease in the population of functional nAChRs at the neuromuscular junction and consequently contribute to the electrophysiological neuromuscular alterations described in the course of chronic Chagas' disease.
ISSN:0009-9104
1365-2249
DOI:10.1111/j.1365-2249.1997.tb08320.x