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Typical cutaneous small-vessel vasculitis induced by combined injection of antiphosphatidylserine/prothrombin complex antibody and anti-LAMP-2 antibody in normal rats.

Tamihiro KawakamiIssei NakadeYuto TamuraFuyu ItoYuka NishibataSakiko MasudaUtano TomaruAkihiro Ishizu
Published in: The Journal of dermatology (2022)
We previously reported that IgA vasculitis and cutaneous arteritis could be dependently associated with the presence of the antiphosphatidylserine/prothrombin complex (anti-PS/PT) antibody and lysosomal-associated membrane protein-2 (LAMP-2). The copy number of LAMP-2 mRNA in skin tissue samples from rats with cutaneous vasculitis induced by intravenous administration of anti-PS/PT antibody after subcutaneous histone injection was significantly higher than in those without cutaneous vasculitis. We found LAMP-2 protein overexpression in neutrophils and vascular endothelial cells of the affected blood vessels in rats with cutaneous vasculitis induced by intravenous administration of anti-PS/PT antibody after cutaneous priming by histones. We found typical cutaneous small-vessel vasculitis in the skin of rats given intravenous injection of both anti-PS/PT antibody and anti-LAMP-2 antibody after cutaneous priming by histones. We suggested that the introduction of skin local histones and anti-PS/PT antibody in serum could move LAMP-2 to the cell surface of neutrophils and vascular endothelial cells, and that anti-LAMP-2 antibody could bridge these cells through antigen-specific binding in typical cutaneous small-vessel vasculitis.
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