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Immunology Letters | 1986

HLA-B27M1M2 and high immune responsiveness to Shigella flexneri in post-dysenteric arthritis

Ch.G. van Bohemen; A.J.J.M. Nabbe; J.E. Landheer; F. C. Grumet; E.S. Mazurkiewicz; H.J. Dinant; R.J. Lionarons; P.C. van Bodegom; H.C. Zanen

The heterogeneous HLA-B27 antigen is closely associated with post-infectious or reactive arthritis (ReA) and is comprised of two serologically defined variants: B27M1+M2+ and B27M1+M2-. An outbreak of dysentery (n = 120) caused by a Shigella flexneri 2a strain, which possessed cell envelope antigens with epitopes resembling B27M2, resulted in five B27M1+M2+ patients with ReA. The remaining seven B27M1+M2+, one B27M1+M2- and all but three B27-negative patients remained free of joint symptoms; the latter three displayed arthralgia. IgM, IgG and IgA serum titers were statistically raised in all patient groups, but were exceptionally and persistently high in the B27M1+M2+ patients with ReA, especially IgA, as determined in acute-phase sera and sera sampled 1 year after dysentery. B27M1+M2+ thus appears to be a marker for a subset of disease, characterized by a high immune response. It is concluded that the B27M2 epitope is not unequivocally disease-related to Shigella ReA, that B27M1+M2+ is not likely to be the only immune-response-regulating gene involved in this form of ReA and that cross-reactivity between bacterial antigenic epitopes and B27 can only be part of a multifactorial process leading to ReA and in itself not sufficient to produce ReA. The intensity of the immune response appears to be another important factor.


Scandinavian Journal of Rheumatology | 1986

Antibodies to Enterobacteriaceae in Ankylosing Spondylitis

Ch.G. van Bohemen; A.J.J.M. Nabbe; A. J. Dekker-Saeys; H.C. Zanen

Serological studies on ankylosing spondylitis (AS; N = 82) show that although statistically more AS patients than controls (N = 24) may possess elevated serum titres to enterobacteria such as Salmonella, Shigella and Yersinia, this does not necessarily imply enterobacterial involvement in AS, as other groups without enteritis or arthropathies that frequent health care facilities (N = 72) may also display this phenomenon, presumably due to increased exposure. Moreover, an inventory of all detectable antibody reactivities to the separated cell envelope antigens of five enterobacterial species suspected of involvement in AS (notably Enterobacter, Klebsiella, Salmonella, Shigella and Yersinia) failed to reveal statistical associations with AS. This might be explained, assuming that the aetiology of AS entails a set of enterobacteria rather than a few individual species. It is proposed that serological studies on AS should be supported by additional information, e.g. that of the faecal carriage, and that these combined studies encompassing other enterobacteria, in addition to Klebsiella, might be fruitful.


Scandinavian Journal of Rheumatology | 1986

Serum IgA to enterobacteria in ankylosing spondylitis.

C.G. van Bohemen; A.J.J.M. Nabbe; E.S. Mazurkiewicz; S. Van der Linden; H.C. Zanen

The aetiology of ankylosing spondylitis (AS) may involve certain enterobacteria. It is therefore interesting that serum polymeric IgA, a precursor of secretory IgA, was statistically elevated in active AS (n = 35) and that levels were comparable to those found in yersiniosis (n = 12); this might indicate antigenic stimulation by bacteria which are present in the intestines of AS patients. However, specific serum IgA to the incriminated enterobacteria Klebsiella, Shigella and Yersinia, as determined by ELISA, was not raised in the above AS patients. Nor were these titres raised in patients with idiopathic reactive arthritis (n = 21). In contrast, yersiniosis (n = 12) and shigellosis (n = 96) patients displayed marked increases in specific serum IgA titres to the respective infectants. It is proposed that AS may involve a set of enterobacteria rather than a few suspected species. Thus, despite the lack of raised group averages, screening of individual patients for specific IgA to several indicated bacteria might disclose whether or not raised serum IgA is related to enterobacterial activity. Apart from this, the above supports other reports indicating that serum IgA may be a useful parameter to assist in monitoring of disease activity in AS. Finally, it is suggested that study of a homogeneous group of reactive arthritis patients might facilitate aetiological research of seronegative arthropathies such as AS.


Immunology Letters | 1986

Lack of serologically defined arthritogenic Shigella flexneri cell envelope antigens in post-dysenteric arthritis.

Ch.G. van Bohemen; A.J.J.M. Nabbe; H.J. Dinant; F. C. Grumet; J.E. Landheer; H.C. Zanen

Post-dysenteric or reactive arthritis (ReA) is closely associated with HLA-B27. This histocompatibility antigen is heterogeneous and consists of 2 serologically defined variants: B27M1+M2+ and B27M1+M2-. This paper gives a qualitative evaluation of the antibodies present in the sera of 62 patients with dysentery due to Shigella flexneri 2a, a known arthritogenic bacterium. The patients were classified in 4 groups: B27M1+M2+ReA+ (n = 5), B27M1+M2+ReA- (n = 7); B27M1+M2-ReA- (n = 1); B27-ReA- (n = 49). The isolated infectant possessed cell envelope antigens with B27M2-like epitopes (Mr 20,000). Analysis of the spectrum of antibodies directed against the separated cell envelope antigens of S. flexneri in the sera of these patients revealed 7 main patterns of reactivity. The detectable immunogens encompassed protein stainable antigens (Mr 98, 78, 68, 54, 50, 44, 41, 35, 14 and 13 kDa), lipopolysaccharides and peptidoglycan. None of the sera possessed detectable antibodies to the B27M2-like antigen. Consequently, this antigen is unlikely to be associated with ReA, and this applies equally to other antigens or patterns of antigens. The arthritogenicity of S. flexneri may therefore not be determined by the presence or absence of detectable antibody titers to certain cell envelope antigens. We hypothesize that other properties of these antigens could be of significance.


Immunology Letters | 1987

Raised serum IgA to common cell envelope antigens supports enterobacterial inductive contribution to pathogenesis of secondary ankylosing spondylitis

Ch.G. van Bohemen; E. Weterings; A.J.J.M. Nabbe; C.J.J. Mulder; H. C. Zanen

Ankylosing spondylitis (AS) is closely associated with the histocompatibility antigen HLA-B27. Pathogenesis of AS is thought to involve interactions between B27 and certain enterobacterial antigens. However, enterobacterial involvement is uncertain and contested by some. The present paper demonstrates raised serum IgA to a common enterobacterial heat modifiable major outer membrane protein (h-momp; Mr 35,000) in active AS (N = 25; IgA = 1485 +/- 20) compared with controls, who were hospital patients without known arthropathies or gastro-intestinal disease (N = 12; IgA = 548 +/- 59). Serum IgG and IgM did not differ statistically. Raised serum IgA to h-momp might indicate enterobacterial antigenic stimulation from the gastro-intestinal tract and thus support an inductive contribution of enterobacterial antigens to the pathogenesis of secondary AS. It does not necessarily imply direct involvement in the pathogenesis of primary AS. H-momp appears to be a convenient tool for serological studies of AS and at present is likely to be more suitable than other bacterial antigens.


Clinical and Experimental Immunology | 1986

Lack of correlation between HLA-B27 like antigenic epitopes on Shigella flexneri and the occurrence of reactive arthritis

C. G. Van Bohemen; A.J.J.M. Nabbe; F. C. Grumet; J.E. Landheer; H.J. Dinant; H. C. Zanen


Immunology | 1985

Susceptibility and HLA-B27 in post-dysenteric arthropathies

C. G. Van Bohemen; R.J. Lionarons; P.C. van Bodegom; H.J. Dinant; J.E. Landheer; A.J.J.M. Nabbe; F. C. Grumet; H. C. Zanen


The Lancet | 1985

IgA RESPONSE DURING ACCIDENTAL INFECTION WITH SHIGELLA FLEXNERI

Ch.G. Van Bohemen; A.J.J.M. Nabbe; H. C. Zanen


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 1986

Serology and bacteriology in reactive arthritis.

C G van Bohemen; A.J.J.M. Nabbe; H. C. Zanen


Fems Microbiology Letters | 1986

Assay of IgA to Shigella flexneri during shigellosis

C.G. van Bohemen; A.J.J.M. Nabbe; J. Weel; J.E. Landheer; H. C. Zanen

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H. C. Zanen

University of Amsterdam

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H.C. Zanen

University of Amsterdam

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J. Weel

University of Amsterdam

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E. Weterings

University of Amsterdam

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