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Autoimmune Associated CHB: maternal anti-SSA/Ro-SSB/La antibodies and apotosis of fetal cardiocytes [Meeting Abstract]

Buyon, JP
ISI:000220470601941
ISSN: 0892-6638
CID: 46597

Immunohistologic evidence supports apoptosis, IgG deposition, and novel macrophage/fibroblast crosstalk in the pathologic cascade leading to congenital heart block

Clancy, Robert M; Kapur, Raj P; Molad, Yair; Askanase, Anca Dinu; Buyon, Jill P
OBJECTIVE: To assess in vivo the pathologic cascade leading to fibrosis in congenital heart block (CHB). In vitro studies suggest that CHB is initiated via apoptosis, resulting in translocation of SSA/Ro and SSB/La antigens and surface binding by maternal autoantibodies. These opsonized cardiocytes are phagocytosed by macrophages, which secrete factors inducing fibrosis. METHODS: Immunohistochemistry analysis was performed on formalin-fixed sections of 4 fetal hearts identified in utero as having CHB or isolated myocarditis; mothers had anti-SSA/Ro and anti-SSB/La antibodies. RESULTS: Apoptosis was most extensive in fetuses dying early and most pronounced in regions containing conduction tissue. Deposition of IgG was observed in hearts from fetuses with CHB/myocarditis, but not in 3 control hearts, and was colocalized with apoptotic cells. Giant cells and macrophages (frequently seen proximal to IgG and apoptotic cells) were present in septal and thickened fibrous subendocardial regions, most apparent in the youngest fetuses. Septal tissue also revealed extensive areas of fibrosis and microcalcification in which a predominant smooth muscle actin (SMA)-positive infiltrate (myofibroblast scarring phenotype) was observed. In contrast, there were no macrophages or SMA-positive cells (other than those lining blood vessels) in septal tissue from control hearts, although rare macrophages were seen in the working myocardium. CONCLUSION: In summary, findings in this unique autopsy material paralleled those in in vitro studies. These data support the notion of exaggerated apoptosis, probably due to ongoing inflammation caused by IgG binding and ingestion by macrophages. Transdifferentiation of cardiac fibroblasts to a scarring phenotype may be a pathologic process initiated by maternal antibodies, and persistence of this phenotype even after birth may relate to the progression of block seen in some infants postpartum
PMID: 14730614
ISSN: 0004-3591
CID: 42614

Intravenous immunoglobulin and placental transport of anti-Ro/La antibodies: comment on the letter by Kaaja and Julkunen [Letter]

Tran, Hai B; Cavill, Dana; Buyon, Jill P; Gordon, Tom P
PMID: 14730639
ISSN: 0004-3591
CID: 73531

The fetal Doppler mechanical PR interval: a validation study

Glickstein, Julie; Buyon, Jill; Kim, Mimi; Friedman, Deborah
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the accuracy of pulsed Doppler-derived fetal PR interval measurements obtained by physicians participating in a multicenter prospective fetal echocardiographic study. METHODS: Echocardiograms on healthy fetuses were performed and evaluated by 15 pediatric cardiologists/perinatologists across the United States who are participating in a larger clinical trial involving fetuses at risk for autoantibody-associated congenital heart block. Prior to enrolling women in the main trial, each physician was provided with a teaching tape to demonstrate how the pulsed Doppler-derived PR interval is measured. The procedure involves placing a gated pulsed Doppler sample volume in the left ventricle at the junction of the anterior leaflet of the mitral valve and the left ventricular outflow tract in an apical 5-chamber view, and simultaneously obtaining left ventricular filling and emptying. Time intervals are measured from the onset of the mitral A wave (atrial systole) to the onset of the aortic pulsed Doppler tracing (ventricular systole). This represents the mechanical PR interval. Each physician measured the pulsed Doppler-derived fetal PR interval on 5 different subjects recruited from the physician's specific site. To validate each physician's technique, the tapes were sent to a central facility and the same intervals were remeasured by an experienced central reader (D.M.F.). A physician was determined to have adequate ability to measure the fetal PR interval if all 5 measurements were within +/- 30 ms of the central reader's measurements, where 30 ms corresponds to 25% of the mean observed in normative PR interval data. This difference was deemed to be the minimum clinically important difference in Doppler PR interval. RESULTS: Fourteen of the 15 physicians were considered to have adequate ability to measure the fetal PR interval according to our established criterion. The overall mean difference between the physicians and the central reader's measurements was -0.26 +/- 11.04 ms (p = 0.84). In addition, 95% of the observed differences were included in the interval (-22.23 to 21.81), which is well within our clinically acceptable range of +/- 30 ms. CONCLUSIONS: The pulsed Doppler assessment of the mechanical PR interval in the fetus can be accurately performed after minimal training. This technique may be a valuable tool for identification of early and potentially reversible conduction abnormalities in fetuses at risk for more advanced and permanent forms of heart block associated with maternal antibodies to SSA/Ro-SSB/La
PMID: 14646414
ISSN: 1015-3837
CID: 73532

Neonatal lupus syndromes

Buyon, J P; Rupel, A; Clancy, R M
The neonatal lupus syndromes (NLS), while quite rare, carry significant mortality and morbidity in cases of cardiac manifestations. Although anti-SSA/Ro-SSB/La antibodies are detected in > 85% of mothers whose fetuses are identified with congenital heart block (CHB) in a structurally normal heart, when clinicians applied this testing to their pregnant patients, the risk for a woman with the candidate antibodies to have a child with CHB was at or below 1 in 50. While the precise pathogenic mechanism of antibody-mediated injury remains unknown, it is clear that the antibodies alone are insufficient to cause disease and fetal factors are likely contributory. In vivo and in vitro evidence supports a pathologic cascade involving apoptosis of cardiocytes, surface translocation of Ro and La antigens, binding of maternal autoantibodies, secretion of profibrosing factors (e.g., TGFbeta) from the scavenging macrophages and modulation of cardiac fibroblasts to a myofibroflast scarring phenotype. The spectrum of cardiac abnormalities continues to expand, with varying degrees of block identified in utero and reports of late onset cardiomyopathy (some of which display endocardial fibroelastosis). Moreover, there is now clear documentation that incomplete blocks (including those improving in utero with dexamethasone) can progress postnatally, despite the clearance of the maternal antibodies from the neonatal circulation. Better echocardiographic measurements which identify first degree block in utero may be the optimal means of approaching pregnant women at risk. Prophylactic therapies, including treatment with intravenous immunoglobulin, await larger trials. In order to achieve advances at both the bench and bedside, national research registries established in the US and Canada are critical
PMID: 15485109
ISSN: 0961-2033
CID: 47776

Clearance of apoptotic cells: TGF-beta in the balance between inflammation and fibrosis [Letter]

Clancy, Robert M; Buyon, Jill P
Transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) has been considered an anti-inflammatory cytokine responsible for the bland removal of apoptotic cells. What is less established is the extent of secretion of this cytokine during the clearance of opsonized apoptotic cells via Fcgamma-mediated uptake. To date both decreased (favoring predominance of inflammation) and increased (favoring resolution of inflammation but potentially pro-fibrotic) responses have been demonstrated. IN an in vitro model of autoantibody-induced cardiac injury, we herein demonstrate that macrophages cocultured with apoptotic human fetal cardiocytes bound by anti-SSA/Ro antibodies secrete increased levels of TGF-beta. Prolonged secretion of this cytokine may contribute to the exuberant scarring seen in congenital heart block associated with maternal autoantibodies reactive with SSA/Rho and SSB/La antigens
PMID: 12960252
ISSN: 0741-5400
CID: 48186

Maternal autoantibodies and congenital heart block: mediators, markers, and therapeutic approach

Buyon, Jill P; Clancy, Robert M
PMID: 14671725
ISSN: 0049-0172
CID: 46222

Myocardial-tissue-specific phenotype of maternal microchimerism in neonatal lupus congenital heart block

Stevens, Anne M; Hermes, Heidi M; Rutledge, Joe C; Buyon, Jill P; Nelson, J Lee
BACKGROUND: During pregnancy, maternal cells pass into the fetus, where they can persist for many years after birth. We investigated the presence of maternal cells in neonatal lupus syndrome (NLS), an autoimmune disease that develops in utero. The most serious complication of NLS is inflammation of the atrioventricular node leading to congenital heart block (CHB). METHODS: In a blinded case-control study, maternal (female) cells were detected and quantified in male NLS and control heart-tissue samples. We used fluorescence in-situ hybridisation to label X and Y chromosomes. Studies in transplantation suggest that donor cells can differentiate into somatic tissue cells. Therefore, we asked whether maternal cells transferred in utero have cellular plasticity. To simultaneously identify and characterise maternal cells, we developed a technique by which multiple phenotypic markers could be detected concurrently with fluorescence in-situ hybridisation in the same cells of a tissue section. FINDINGS: Maternal cells were found in 15 of 15 sections of NLS heart tissue, ranging from 0.025% to 2.2% of total cells. By contrast, maternal cells were found in two of eight control sections (0-0.1%). Very few maternal cells expressed the haemopoietic cell marker CD45. Most expressed sarcomeric alpha actin, a specific marker for cardiac myocytes. INTERPRETATION: Our findings suggest that differentiated tissue-specific maternal microchimerism can occur in neonates. Thus, semiallogeneic maternal cells could be the target of an immune response. Alternatively, maternal cells could contribute to a secondary process of tissue repair
PMID: 14630442
ISSN: 1474-547x
CID: 73533

Autoantibody-associated congenital heart block: the clinical perspective

Buyon, Jill P; Friedman, Deborah M
Congenital heart block (CHB) can occur in association with structural heart disease, such as atrioventricular septal defects, left atrial isomerism, and abnormalities of the great arteries, with tumors, such as mesotheliomas, or as an isolated defect. In 1928, Aylward reported the occurrence of CHB in two children whose mother 'suffered from Mikulicz's disease.' This curious clinical observation was further solidified by the 1970s, with reports of CHB in children whose mothers had autoimmune diseases and that the maternal sera contained antibodies to Ro ribonucleoproteins. It was subsequently reported that many mothers also had antibodies to La. Other abnormalities affecting the skin, liver, and blood elements were associated with anti-Ro/La antibodies in the maternal and fetal circulation, and are now grouped under the heading of neonatal lupus syndromes. Neonatal lupus was termed because the cutaneous lesions of the neonate resembled those seen in systemic lupus erythematosus
PMID: 12967520
ISSN: 1523-3774
CID: 46288

Cytokine polymorphisms and histologic expression in autopsy studies: contribution of TNF-alpha and TGF-beta1 to the pathogenesis of autoimmune-associated congenital heart block

Clancy, Robert M; Backer, Chelsea B; Yin, Xiaoming; Kapur, Raj P; Molad, Yair; Buyon, Jill P
Although Abs to SSA/Ro-SSB/La are necessary for the development of congenital heart block (CHB), the low frequency suggests that fetal factors are contributory. Because CHB involves a cascade from inflammation to scarring, polymorphisms of the TNF-alpha promoter region and codons 10 and 25 of the TGF-beta gene were evaluated in 88 children (40 CHB, 17 rash, 31 unaffected siblings) and 74 mothers from the Research Registry for Neonatal Lupus (NL). Cytokine expression was assessed in autopsy material from two fetuses with CHB. Significantly increased frequency of the -308A (high-producer) allele of TNF-alpha was observed in all NL groups compared with controls. In contrast, the TGF-beta polymorphism Leu(10) (associated with increased fibrosis) was significantly higher in CHB children (genotypic frequency 60%, allelic frequency 78%) than unaffected offspring (genotypic frequency 29%, p = 0.016; allelic frequency 56%, p = 0.011) and controls, while there were no significant differences between controls and other NL groups. For the TGF-beta polymorphism, Arg(25), there were no significant differences between NL groups and controls. In fetal CHB hearts, protein expression of TGF-beta, but not TNF-alpha, was demonstrated in septal regions, extracellularly in the fibrous matrix, and intracellularly in macrophage infiltrates. Age-matched fetal hearts from voluntary terminations expressed neither cytokine. TNF-alpha may be one of several factors that amplify susceptibility; however, the genetic studies, backed by the histological data, more convincingly link TGF-beta to the pathogenesis of CHB. This profibrosing cytokine and its secretion/activation circuitry may provide a novel direction for evaluating fetal factors in the development of a robust animal model of CHB as well as therapeutic strategies in humans
PMID: 12960355
ISSN: 0022-1767
CID: 39087