Analysis of candidate retinal autoantigens in autoimmune uveitis

Autoimmune uveitis is a non-infective ocular inflammation of humans that potentially causes blindness. It is mediated primarily by autoreactive CD4+ Tlymphocytes that target antigens within the retina. Autoantibody responses play a secondary role. This thesis describes various investigations into hu...

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Main Author: Morgan, James
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56713/
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author Morgan, James
author_facet Morgan, James
author_sort Morgan, James
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Autoimmune uveitis is a non-infective ocular inflammation of humans that potentially causes blindness. It is mediated primarily by autoreactive CD4+ Tlymphocytes that target antigens within the retina. Autoantibody responses play a secondary role. This thesis describes various investigations into humoral and cellular immune responses in autoimmune uveitis and assesses several methodologies for their suitability to applied human research. Recombinant human retinal S antigen (RSAg), an important candidate autoantigen in uveitis, was cloned and expressed in bacterial and human cells. Purified RSAg was tested by ELISA against sera from uveitis patients and controls. The recombinant antigens performed well in ELISA. No significant differences in antibody titres were detected between the groups. B-cell epitope preferences of anti-RSAg polyclonal antibodies were investigated by screening several random phage display libraries. One library produced results, but no defining epitope was identified for either uveitis or control sera. In uveitis research this technique might be better suited to delineating minimal epitope requirements of monoclonal antibodies. As yet undiscovered uveitis autoantigens may exist. A human retinal complementary DNA library was constructed and screened with uveitis and control sera. Seven potentially autoantigenic peptides were identified and expressed as fusion proteins. At least one peptide displayed significantly higher ELISA readings for uveitis over control sera. The full potential of this technique is still to be realised. Responses of peripheral CD4+ T-lymphocytes to antigen-specific stimulation were studied at the single-cell level using cytokine flow cytometry. A definite response to RSAg was detected in human uveitis and control lymphocytes using this method. This technique has great potential for identifying autoantigenic proteins/epitopes, and analysing resultant cytokine profiles in uveitogenic T-cells. Several of the new strategies and techniques described here have already produced exciting findings. It is envisaged that they will make further significant contributions to applied human uveitis research in the near future.
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spelling nottingham-567132025-02-28T12:12:49Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56713/ Analysis of candidate retinal autoantigens in autoimmune uveitis Morgan, James Autoimmune uveitis is a non-infective ocular inflammation of humans that potentially causes blindness. It is mediated primarily by autoreactive CD4+ Tlymphocytes that target antigens within the retina. Autoantibody responses play a secondary role. This thesis describes various investigations into humoral and cellular immune responses in autoimmune uveitis and assesses several methodologies for their suitability to applied human research. Recombinant human retinal S antigen (RSAg), an important candidate autoantigen in uveitis, was cloned and expressed in bacterial and human cells. Purified RSAg was tested by ELISA against sera from uveitis patients and controls. The recombinant antigens performed well in ELISA. No significant differences in antibody titres were detected between the groups. B-cell epitope preferences of anti-RSAg polyclonal antibodies were investigated by screening several random phage display libraries. One library produced results, but no defining epitope was identified for either uveitis or control sera. In uveitis research this technique might be better suited to delineating minimal epitope requirements of monoclonal antibodies. As yet undiscovered uveitis autoantigens may exist. A human retinal complementary DNA library was constructed and screened with uveitis and control sera. Seven potentially autoantigenic peptides were identified and expressed as fusion proteins. At least one peptide displayed significantly higher ELISA readings for uveitis over control sera. The full potential of this technique is still to be realised. Responses of peripheral CD4+ T-lymphocytes to antigen-specific stimulation were studied at the single-cell level using cytokine flow cytometry. A definite response to RSAg was detected in human uveitis and control lymphocytes using this method. This technique has great potential for identifying autoantigenic proteins/epitopes, and analysing resultant cytokine profiles in uveitogenic T-cells. Several of the new strategies and techniques described here have already produced exciting findings. It is envisaged that they will make further significant contributions to applied human uveitis research in the near future. 2005 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56713/1/eThesis%20Final%20Corrected%202005%20James%20Morgan.pdf Morgan, James (2005) Analysis of candidate retinal autoantigens in autoimmune uveitis. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Uveitis; Cellular immune responses; Recombinant human retinal S antigen; Autoantigenic peptides; Cytokine profiles
spellingShingle Uveitis; Cellular immune responses; Recombinant human retinal S antigen; Autoantigenic peptides; Cytokine profiles
Morgan, James
Analysis of candidate retinal autoantigens in autoimmune uveitis
title Analysis of candidate retinal autoantigens in autoimmune uveitis
title_full Analysis of candidate retinal autoantigens in autoimmune uveitis
title_fullStr Analysis of candidate retinal autoantigens in autoimmune uveitis
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of candidate retinal autoantigens in autoimmune uveitis
title_short Analysis of candidate retinal autoantigens in autoimmune uveitis
title_sort analysis of candidate retinal autoantigens in autoimmune uveitis
topic Uveitis; Cellular immune responses; Recombinant human retinal S antigen; Autoantigenic peptides; Cytokine profiles
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56713/