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Mechanisms of Disease: antiphospholipid antibodies - from clinical association to pathologic mechanism

Journal

NATURE CLINICAL PRACTICE RHEUMATOLOGY
Volume 4, Issue 4, Pages 192-199

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ncprheum0740

Keywords

antiphospholipid antibodies; antiphospholipid syndrome; beta(2)-glycoprotein I; lupus anticoagulant; systemic lupus erythematosus

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The discovery that antiphospholipid antibodies recognize plasma proteins that bind to phospholipids rather than recognizing phospholipids themselves has been a major advance in research into antiphospholipid syndrome (APS). It is now established that beta(2)-glycoprotein I (beta(2)GPI) is the most important antigen for antiphospholipid antibodies. However, the possible pathologic mechanism is still much debated. This is mainly because not all patients with anti-beta(2)GPI antibodies show clinical symptoms that are related to APS. Several reports indicate that anti-beta(2)GPI antibodies with lupus anticoagulant (LA) activity are clinically of much importance. Most patients with LA caused by anti-beta(2)GPI antibodies suffer from thrombosis as a result of recognition of the first domain of beta(2)GPI by these antibodies. In the search for a pathologic mechanism that might explain the high occurrence of thrombosis in patients with anti-domain I antibodies (LA-causing anti-beta(2)GPI antibodies), it was found that these antibodies show increased resistance to the anticoagulant activity of annexin A5. We have shown that the same population of antibodies also displays increased resistance to activated protein C. Owing to the diversity of clinical symptoms related to APS, it is likely that other pathologic mechanisms also contribute to the occurrence of APS-related symptoms.

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