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. 1982 Aug;79(2):115-8.
doi: 10.1111/1523-1747.ep12500037.

Antibodies to human epidermal cytoplasmic antigens: incidence, patterns, and titers

Free article

Antibodies to human epidermal cytoplasmic antigens: incidence, patterns, and titers

E P Paluch et al. J Invest Dermatol. 1982 Aug.
Free article

Abstract

Serum or plasma specimens were assayed in indirect immunfluorescence tests on cryostat sections of normal human skin for the presence and titer of antibodies reactive with human epidermal cytoplasmic antigens. A polyvalent fluorescein-labeled goat anti-human immunoglobulin antiserum was used in all tests. Three distinct staining patterns were noted: upper epidermal cytoplasmic fluorescence, U-CYT, produced by antibodies reactive with antigen present in cells of the upper and middle layers of the epidermis; general cytoplasmic fluorescence, G-CYT, produced by antibodies reactive with antigens present in cells throughout the epidermis; and basal cell cytoplasmic fluorescence, BCL, produced by antibodies reactive with components present only in basal cells. Sera from 8% of 52 normal blood donors produced the U-CYT pattern at dilutions greater than 1:10. The incidence of antibodies reactive with epidermal cytoplasmic antigens in patients with a clinical history of not more than 2 basal cell carcinomas of the skin was 5%, compared to an incidence of 89% in those individuals with 3 or more separate instances of skin neoplasms. There was no difference in the frequency with which cryosurgery was used in the treatment of skin neoplasms in either of these 2 groups. Antibodies to epidermal cytoplasmic antigens were also detected in 10% of patients with nondermatologic, nonpulmonary neoplasms, in 43% of patients with pulmonary neoplasms and in 1 of 11 patient with nonneoplastic diseases. Positive sera yielded titers ranging from 1:16 to 1:1024. The most common staining patterns noted in all of these cases were the U-CYT and G-CYT patterns; the BCL staining pattern was noted in only one instance.

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