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Pathogenic autoantibody internalization in myositis.

Iago Pinal-Fernandez1,2, Sandra Muñoz-Braceras1, Maria Casal-Dominguez1,2

  • 1Muscle Disease Section, National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA.

Medrxiv : the Preprint Server for Health Sciences
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PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

In myositis, autoantibodies enter muscle cells, target their specific proteins, and disrupt normal cell function, driving disease pathology. This study clarifies the role of autoantibodies in autoimmune muscle diseases.

Keywords:
MyositisRNA-sequencingautoantibodiesdermatomyositisimmune-mediated necrotizing myositis

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Area of Science:

  • Immunology
  • Autoimmune diseases
  • Muscle biology

Background:

  • Myositis encompasses autoimmune muscle diseases where autoantibodies target intracellular proteins, leaving their pathogenic role unclear.
  • Understanding how autoantibodies interact with intracellular targets is crucial for elucidating myositis pathogenesis.

Approach:

  • Utilized confocal immunofluorescence microscopy to visualize antibody and autoantigen localization in myositis muscle biopsies.
  • Performed bulk RNA sequencing on 668 patient samples (myositis, disease controls, healthy controls) and on patient-derived myoblasts electroporated with myositis autoantibodies.

Key Points:

  • Myositis autoantibodies were found to accumulate within muscle fibers, colocalizing with their cognate autoantigens.
  • Specific autoantibodies correlated with distinct functional disruptions: anti-Mi2 with gene derepression, anti-PM/Scl with RNA exosome complex dysfunction, and anti-HMGCR with lipid accumulation.
  • Electroporation of patient antibodies into cultured myoblasts replicated disease-specific transcriptomic changes.

Conclusions:

  • Demonstrated that autoantibodies are internalized into muscle fibers in myositis.
  • Established that these internalized autoantibodies disrupt the biological function of their autoantigens.
  • Concluded that autoantibody-mediated disruption of autoantigen function is a key mechanism in myositis pathophysiology.