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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The isolation and characterisation of antiplatelet antibodies

Lindsey, Nigel J., Behrendt, M., Hamidpour, M., Partridge, L.J., Griffiths, B January 2006 (has links)
No / The isolation and characterisation of antiplatelet antibodies in autoimmune thrombocytopenia purpura patients (ITP) is described. Autoimmune thrombocytopenia purpura is an autoimmune disease, clinically defined by low platelet counts, normal or increased megakaryocytopoiesis and antiplatelet antibodies in serum. This study used phage display to isolate Fab antiplatelet antibodies to study the structure-function relationships of pathogenic antibodies in ITP. Out of six randomly selected colonies, four colonies reacted strongly with whole platelets in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Sequence analysis showed that all four colonies had the same DNA sequence and were the same antibody. Results of Western blotting against non-reduced human platelet lysate showed that the Fab reacted with platelet proteins with apparent molecular weights of 116, 92 and 39 kD. Furthermore, Western blotting assay against purified membrane glycoprotein IIIa demonstrated reactivity against a band with a molecular weight of 92 kD. Results from Western blotting against platelet lysate and pure platelet glycoprotein confirmed the Fab fragment recognised the platelet glycoprotein IIIa. Three out of the four phage colonies produced soluble Fab, which demonstrated reactivity against platelet autoantigens in ELISA. Further sequence analysis showed that the Fab was somatically mutated suggesting antigen drive and therefore T-cell assistance was important in the development of this antibody. One of the somatic mutations introduced an RSD amino acid sequence in the complementary determining region 1(CDR1) of the light chain, which may mimic the RGD motif of fibrinogen which binds integrin GPIIb/IIIa. This raises the possibility that somatic mutation and antigen drive have produced a pathogenic autoantibody.
2

Autoantikūniai ant šunų eritrocitų ir trombocitų: nustatymas ir funkcinė svarba / Auto-antibodies on canine erythrocytes and platelets: detection and functional significance

Kučinskienė, Gintarė 30 December 2005 (has links)
In this study, we demonstrated that membrane immunofluorescence (MIF) with canine erythrocytes is a much more sensitive diagnostic technique compared with the Coombs test to detect auto-antibodies on RBC. We also demonstrate how the evaluation of the MIF test can be made more precisely which results in a more clear interpretation. Till nowadays the Evans syndrome (combined thrombocytopenia and anemia) is not very well diagnosed in dogs. Only a few studies with low animal numbers tested auto-antibodies on RBC and thrombocytes. Here we describe the frequency of Evans syndrome based on the evaluation of a large data set with 557 dogs. The novelty of the thesis also lies in making a research of the amount of CICs in sera of AIHA/AITP patients is described as well as the cytotoxic potential of patient’s sera for canine leucocytes. These new aspects of diagnosis (AIHA) and pathogenesis (AIHA/AITP) are not only relevant for dogs but also for humans and can be used for better differential diagnosis in medicine. The new findings with respect to circulating immune complexes and cytotoxicity are also offer new therapeutic concepts. Besides, the study has resulted in the characterization of monoclonal antibodies which allow for the detection of so far undetectable canine differentiation antigens (CD molecules) on canine erythrocytes (CD235) and thrombocytes (CD42a). The identified mAbs are useful in the identification of relevant target structures for autoantibodies on these cells.

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