- Main
Autoantibodies to Perilipin-1 Define a Subset of Acquired Generalized Lipodystrophy.
- Mandel-Brehm, Caleigh;
- Vazquez, Sara E;
- Liverman, Christopher;
- Cheng, Mickie;
- Quandt, Zoe;
- Kung, Andrew F;
- Parent, Audrey;
- Miao, Brenda;
- Disse, Emmanuel;
- Cugnet-Anceau, Christine;
- Dalle, Stéphane;
- Orlova, Elizaveta;
- Frolova, Elena;
- Alba, Diana;
- Michels, Aaron;
- Oftedal, Bergithe E;
- Lionakis, Michail S;
- Husebye, Eystein S;
- Agarwal, Anil K;
- Li, Xilong;
- Zhu, Chengsong;
- Li, Quan;
- Oral, Elif;
- Brown, Rebecca;
- Anderson, Mark S;
- Garg, Abhimanyu;
- DeRisi, Joseph L
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.2337/db21-1172Abstract
Acquired lipodystrophy is often characterized as an idiopathic subtype of lipodystrophy. Despite suspicion of an immune-mediated pathology, biomarkers such as autoantibodies are generally lacking. Here, we used an unbiased proteome-wide screening approach to identify autoantibodies to the adipocyte-specific lipid droplet protein perilipin 1 (PLIN1) in a murine model of autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type 1 (APS1). We then tested for PLIN1 autoantibodies in human subjects with acquired lipodystrophy with two independent severe breaks in immune tolerance (including APS1) along with control subjects using a specific radioligand binding assay and indirect immunofluorescence on fat tissue. We identified autoantibodies to PLIN1 in these two cases, including the first reported case of APS1 with acquired lipodystrophy and a second patient who acquired lipodystrophy as an immune-related adverse event following cancer immunotherapy. Lastly, we also found PLIN1 autoantibodies to be specifically enriched in a subset of patients with acquired generalized lipodystrophy (17 of 46 [37%]), particularly those with panniculitis and other features of autoimmunity. These data lend additional support to new literature that suggests that PLIN1 autoantibodies represent a marker of acquired autoimmune lipodystrophies and further link them to a break in immune tolerance.
Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
Main Content
Enter the password to open this PDF file:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-