Sera of some patients afflicted with the inflammatory
disease myositis contain antibodies of the anti-PL-12 type.
A fraction of these polyclonal autoantibodies specifically
precipitates the fully matured human tRNAAla
bearing the anticodon IGC (PL-12 antigen). Earlier work
(Bunn & Mathews, 1987, Science 238:116–119)
had shown that the epitopes are located entirely within
the anticodon stem-loop of the tRNAAla. Here
we demonstrate that human anti-tRNAAla autoantibodies
immunoprecipitate a synthetic polyribonucleotide containing
inosine (I) and N1-methylinosine (m1I)
separated by 2 nt as in the anticodon stem-loop of human
tRNAAla. The shortest polyribonucleotide that
can be immunoprecipitated corresponds to the pentanucleotide
IpGpCpm1IpUp, which corresponds to part of the
anticodon loop of human tRNAAla and lacks the
stem-loop structure. The efficiency of immunoprecipitation
was about four times greater with longer polyribonucleotides
capable of forming a stem-loop structure, and was abolished
by altering the relative positions of I and m1I
within the synthetic polynucleotide. Synthetic oligodeoxyribonucleotide
analogs of the tRNAAla stem-loop, containing
the sequence dIpdGdCdm1Ip, are not antigenic.
Our results show that human anti-tRNAAla autoantibodies
selectively recognize chemical details of modified nucleotides
(the 6-keto group of inosine-34 and the 6-keto group and
the N1-methyl groups of N1-methylinosine-37)
within an anticodon loop structure of a tRNA molecule.
We also describe the chemical synthesis of the phosphoramidite
derivatives corresponding to N1-methylinosine
and N1-methyl-2′-deoxyinosine
for use in the automatic chemical synthesis of oligonucleotides
containing N1-methylinosine and N1-methyl-2′-deoxyinosine.