Cornelia Bigler
University Hospital of Basel
7 Papers
24 Citations
Cornelia Bigler is an academic researcher from University Hospital of Basel. The author has contributed to research in topics: Lupus nephritis & Antibody. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 6 publications.
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Papers
Autoantibodies against complement C1q specifically target C1q bound on early apoptotic cells
Abstract: Autoantibodies against complement C1q (anti-C1q) are frequently found in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). They strongly correlate with the occurrence of severe lupus nephritis, suggesting a pathogenic role in SLE. Because anti-C1q are known to recognize a neoepitope on bound C1q, but not on fluid-phase C1q, the aim of this study was to clarify the origin of anti-C1q by determining the mechanism that renders C1q antigenic. We investigated anti-C1q from serum and purified total IgG of patients with SLE and hypocomplementemic urticarial vasculitis as well as two monoclonal human anti-C1q Fab from a SLE patient generated by phage display. Binding characteristics, such as their ability to recognize C1q bound on different classes of Igs, on immune complexes, and on cells undergoing apoptosis, were analyzed. Interestingly, anti-C1q did not bind to C1q bound on Igs or immune complexes. Neither did we observe specific binding of anti-C1q to C1q bound on late apoptotic/necrotic cells when compared with binding in the absence of C1q. However, as shown by FACS analysis and confocal microscopy, anti-C1q specifically targeted C1q bound on early apoptotic cells. Anti-C1q were found to specifically target C1q bound on cells undergoing apoptosis. Our observations suggest that early apoptotic cells are a major target of the autoimmune response in SLE and provide a direct link between human SLE, apoptosis, and C1q.
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Antinucleosome Antibodies as a Marker of Active Proliferative Lupus Nephritis
Cornelia Bigler,Margarita López-Trascasa,Eliska Potlukova,Solange Moll,Doris Danner,Monica Schaller,Marten Trendelenburg +6 more
TL;DR: The data suggest that determining antinucleosome antibodies is of limited help in the distinction of patients with active proliferative lupus nephritis from patients with SLE without active renal disease.
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Anti-C1q autoantibodies do not correlate with the occurrence or severity of experimental lupus nephritis
Cornelia Bigler,Helmut Hopfer,Doris Danner,Monica Schaller,Michael J. Mihatsch,Marten Trendelenburg +5 more
TL;DR: The absence of a correlation between the presence of anti-C1q and the occurrence of experimental lupus nephritis contradicts the hypothesis that anti- C1q are pathogenic.
A Survey of the Criteria Used for the Selection of Alternative Comparator Products by Participating Regulators and Organizations of the International Pharmaceutical Regulators Programme.
Andrew Tam,Alfredo García-Arieta,Ivana S. Abalos,Eduardo Agostinho Freitas Fernandes,Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos,Zulema Rodríguez Martínez,Milly Divinsky,Rami Kariv,Henrike Potthast,April C. Braddy,Clare Rodrigues,Erwin Guzmán Aurela,Liliana Carolina Arevalo Gonzalez,Diego Gutierres Triana,Ben Jones,Cho Rong Ahn,Hyuna Kim,So-Hee Kim,Ryosuke Kuribayashi,Aya Myoenzono,Kohei Shimojo,Joy Van Oudtshoorn,Cornelia Bigler,Ricarda Meincke,Matthias S Roost,Chantal Walther,Li-feng Hsu,Christopher Crane,Tony Jarman +28 more
TL;DR: A survey conducted within the Bioequivalence Working Group for Generics (BEWGG) of the International Pharmaceutical Regulators Programme (IPRP) indicated that the criteria for selecting an alternative comparator product varies as mentioned in this paper .