Investigation of the nature and specificity of antinuclear antibody in dogs
- PMID: 6606370
Investigation of the nature and specificity of antinuclear antibody in dogs
Abstract
A liquid phase radioimmunoassay was used to test sera from 34 dogs in 3 categories, determined by presence of antinuclear antibody (ANA) and disease, for antibodies against native canine DNA and dAdT, a synthetic double-stranded DNA analog. Antibodies to dAdT were absent in healthy dogs which, as a group, had levels of DNA antibodies consistent with those reported for healthy persons. Canine patients with a variety of illnesses, but which remained ANA negative, had slightly increased levels of binding of DNA and dAdT. As a group, ANA-positive dogs had significantly increased binding of dAdT and native DNA, which was shown to be mainly, but not entirely, double stranded. In the ANA-positive group, no correlation was found among ANA titer, % DNA binding, and % dAdT binding, indicating that these 3 procedures detect antibodies with differing specificities. In dogs, ANA are heterogeneous in antigenic specificity. Antibodies to double-stranded nucleic acid in dogs do not appear to be as specific for systemic lupus erythematosus as they are reported to be in persons with autoimmune disease.
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