Introduction: Both autoimmune polyendocrinopathy-candidiasis-ectodermal dystrophy (APECED) and the rare thymoma patients with chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis (CMC) have neutralizing autoantibodies to Th17 cytokines and significant defects in production of IL-22 and IL-17F by their T cells. The cause of these defects is unknown. We hypothesized that they might result from autoimmunity against upstream cytokines normally responsible for generating and maintaining Th17 cells.
Methods: Luciferase immunoprecipitation (LIPS) was used to screen for autoantibodies to IL-6, IL-1β, TGF-β3, IL-21, and IL-23 in patients with APECED or thymoma. We used Western blotting to assess the conformation-dependence of the IL-6 autoantibodies and flow cytometric analysis of intracellular phospho-STAT3 induction to assess IL-6-neutralizing capacity in IgGs isolated from patient and control sera. We also used Luminex xMAP to measure serum cytokine levels.
Results: We found autoantibodies binding to conformational epitopes of IL-6 in 19.5% of 41 patients with APECED and 12.5% of 104 with thymoma-especially in those with long disease durations. The autoantibodies were predominantly of IgG1 subclass and failed to neutralize IL-6 activity. Notably, serum levels of the IL-6 and IL-17A cytokines were higher in anti-IL-6 seropositive than-negative APECED patients or healthy controls. We also detected autoantibody binding to IL-23 in 27.9% of thymoma patients, resulting from cross-recognition through the p40 subunit it shares with IL-12.
Conclusions: IL-6 and IL-17A elevation in these seropositive patients suggests that antibody-binding may protect IL-6 from degradation and prolong its half-life in vivo.
Keywords: APECED; Anti‐IL‐6; thymoma.