Background & aims: Liver-specific membrane lipoprotein (LSP) is a heterogeneous liver preparation that has been widely used to study autoreactivity in liver disease. The aim of this study was to identify autoantigens in LSP.
Methods: Guinea pig anti-LSP serum was used to screen a human liver complementary DNA (cDNA) library. Humoral immune responses to isolated potential autoantigens were investigated by immunoblotting in 91 pediatric patients with various liver diseases, 20 adult patients with alcoholic liver disease and 20 with autoimmune thyroid disease, 37 healthy children, and 20 healthy adults.
Results: A 1.6-kilobase cDNA insert isolated from the cDNA library was found to encode amino acids 61-374 of the human alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH)-gamma 1 subunit. Antibodies to this or other ADH subunits were found significantly more frequently in autoimmune liver diseases (19 of 39 patients; 49%), Wilson's disease (5 of 13 patients; 38%), and alcoholic liver disease (10 of 20 patients; 50%) than in normal controls (P < 0.0001, P < 0.005, and P < 0.05, respectively) and correlated with disease activity in autoimmune liver disease.
Conclusions: ADH has been identified as a new antigenic component of the LSP using a xenogeneic antiserum to immunoprobe a human cDNA liver library and seems to be a target autoantigen in liver disease. This approach may be useful in identifying other potential autoantigens.