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Case Reports
. 1995 Mar;84(3):367-74.

Sequence analysis of immunoglobulin heavy-chain variable region genes from the synovium of a rheumatoid arthritis patient shows little evidence of mutation but diverse CDR3

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Case Reports

Sequence analysis of immunoglobulin heavy-chain variable region genes from the synovium of a rheumatoid arthritis patient shows little evidence of mutation but diverse CDR3

C M Brown et al. Immunology. 1995 Mar.

Abstract

To gain insight into the nature of B-lymphocyte responses in the synovium of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients, we amplified and sequenced immunoglobulin heavy-chain variable region genes expressed in seven IgM and three IgG-secreting synovial-derived hybridomas established from one patient. Each hybridoma V-region was encoded by unique VH-D-JH combination demonstrating that none of these hybridomas derived from clonally related B-lymphocytes in vivo. The expressed VH genes closely resembled (95.6%-100% homology) known germline VH genes in most hybridomas, including VH genes frequently used to encode autoantibodies. The antibodies produced by these hybridomas, with the exception of one IgM rheumatoid factor, did not bind to any of a large panel of autoantigens in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), immunoblotting and immunofluoresence, suggesting that frequent expression of 'autoantibody-associated' VH genes does not correlate with detectable autoreactivity in this patient. Hybridoma CDR3 DNA was diverse in length and gene composition. Conserved heavy-chain cross-reactive idiotypes were expressed on 4/7 IgM- and 2/3 IgG-secreting hybridomas. The close similarity of expressed VH genes to germline counterparts of these hybridomas suggests that polyclonal activation is a prominent mechanism in B-lymphocyte activation in the synovium of this rheumatoid arthritis patient.

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