4.5 Article

Immunoglobulin free light chains in saliva: a potential marker for disease activity in multiple sclerosis

Journal

CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 192, Issue 1, Pages 7-17

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cei.13086

Keywords

dimers; immunoglobulin free light chains; monomers; multiple sclerosis; saliva

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Funding

  1. National Multiple Sclerosis Society [PP-1512-07139]

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A new procedure was developed and applied to study immunoglobulin free light chains (FLC) in saliva of healthy subjects and patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). The procedure was based on a Western blot analysis for detection and semiquantitative evaluation of monomeric and dimeric FLCs. The FLC indices accounting for the total FLC levels and for the monomer/dimer ratios of j and k FLC were calculated, and the cut-off values of the FLC indices were determined to distinguish healthy state from MS disease. The obtained FLC index values were statistically different in the saliva of three groups: active MS patients, MS patients in remission and healthy subjects groups. Our FLC monomer-dimer analysis allowed differentiation between healthy state and active MS with specificity of 100% and a sensitivity of 88.5%. The developed technique may serve as a new non-invasive complementary tool to evaluate the disease state by differentiating active MS from remission with sensitivity of 89% and specificity of 80%.

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