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Alloimmune neonatal neutropenia resulting from immunization to a high‐ frequency antigen on the granulocyte Fc gamma receptor III
Author(s) -
Bux J.,
Hartmann C.,
MuellerEckhardt C.
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
transfusion
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.045
H-Index - 132
eISSN - 1537-2995
pISSN - 0041-1132
DOI - 10.1046/j.1537-2995.1994.34794330016.x
Subject(s) - granulocyte , neutropenia , medicine , immunology , immunization , antigen , chemotherapy
BACKGROUND : Alloimmune neonatal neutropenia is mainly caused by NA‐ or NB1‐specific alloantibodies. An antibody in the serum of a Turkish mother who had given birth to an infant with alloimmune neonatal neutropenia showed no NA or NB specificity and was therefore investigated further. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS : The number of antibody‐ binding sites was calculated by determination of elutable IgG from granulocytes using a quantitative sandwich enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay. Complement activation was tested by immunofluorescence (C3d) and cytotoxicity tests. The antigen was identified using the antigen‐ capture assay, monoclonal antibody‐specific immobilization of granulocyte antigens, and a modified immunoprecipitation method based upon biotinylation of proteins and visualization by luminescence (luminoimmunoprecipitation). Family study and determination of antigen frequency were done by immunofluorescence and agglutination tests. RESULTS : A noncytotoxic, granulocyte‐specific alloantibody that recognized the Fc gamma receptor III, independent of the NA phenotype, was detected, and 242,000 binding sites per cell were calculated. Of granulocytes from 150 randomly selected German blood donors, the alloantibody bound to all. The maternal cells were typed NA1/NA2‐ and NB1‐positive. CONCLUSION : These data reveal the presence of a previously unrecognized, high‐frequency epitope on the granulocyte Fc gamma receptor III. Luminoimmunoprecipitation proved to be a simple, nonradioactive technique that was useful in identifying the molecule involved.

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