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. 1986 Jan;63(1):41-8.

Decreased C3b receptors (CR1) on erythrocytes from patients with systemic lupus erythematosus

Decreased C3b receptors (CR1) on erythrocytes from patients with systemic lupus erythematosus

E Holme et al. Clin Exp Immunol. 1986 Jan.

Abstract

Using 125I-F(ab')2 anti-CR1 we have measured C3b receptors (CR1) on the erythrocytes of 56 normal individuals 26 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and 24 with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). The mean number of CR1 sites in SLE (1150/cell) but not RA (1460/cell) was significantly lower (P less than 0.01) than normal (2200/cell). Although the cumulative frequency curve for normals showed minor inflections at frequencies of 18% and 64%, these were not sufficiently marked to permit us to conclude that they distinguished subpopulations of different CR1 phenotypes. Measurement of CR1 numbers of two normal families and four families of SLE patients indicated that low CR1 numbers aggregated in families as did high CR1 numbers, a finding which suggests that CR1 numbers are under genetic control. However, certain observations in SLE patients indicated that low CR1 numbers could be an acquired abnormality. These included, (a) absent CR1 phenotype in a patient whose family had moderate and high CR1 numbers, (b) increasing CR1 numbers as SLE patients went into remission, (c) CR1 numbers were lower in patients with active compared with inactive disease and (d) CR1 numbers were different in each of two sets of identical twins (Fig. 4A). Our conclusions are that, (a) genetic factors probably influence CR1 numbers in normal individuals, (b) that our findings were not inconsistent with the two codominant allele models (Wilson et al., 1982), and (c) the low CR1 phenotype of SLE patients may be secondary to the disease process.

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