Antibodies to Ro52/Ro60 (SSA) and La (SSB) are strongly associated to the autoimmune disease primary Sjögren's syndrome and are important in the serologic diagnosis of the disease.
Eight (57%) of 14 ID defined Ro negative NLE, SCLE and SS sera were reactive with both Ro fusion proteins by ELISA: ELISA studies with recombinant 52 and 60 kDa Ro protein fragments revealed at least 2 major epitopes on each Ro protein.
RF should be considered as a prognostic, but not diagnostic, factor in patients with pSS, as it is associated with more severe disease course (sicca eye symptoms, ESSDAI) and parameters (production of gammaglobulins, ANA, anti SS-A, anti-SS-B autoantibodies) indicating increased B cell activity.
The coexistence of anti-La (SS-B) and anti-Ro (SS-A) autoantibodies in pSS is probably explained by intermolecular spreading of autoimmunity toward different components of the La/Ro ribonucleoprotein (RNP).
The expression of a Ro 60-reactive public B cell clonotype in a subset of patients with primary SS as a long-lived, class-switched circulating autoantibody implies a common breach of B cell tolerance checkpoints in these patients.
The susceptibility to pSS and/or the presence of SS-A/SS-B autoantibodies in pSS patients is associated with DRB1*03-DQB1*02 and DRB1*02-DQB1*06 haplotypes, whereas no associations have been described with any HLA class I allele.
To investigate the association of polymorphisms of the SSA1 gene (OMIM 109092) with primary Sjögren's syndrome (SS) and anti-SS-A/Ro52 antibody production.