Assuming that there are autoantibodies associated with ME/CFS why have they been so difficult to find relative to SLE, RA, Sjogrens, scleroderma, etc?
Don't you have to know what antibody you're looking for? Surely an assay can't contain every single human protein, so it doesn't seem like failing to find autoantibodies with these assays would be evidence that there aren't any clinically meaningful ones.
Do we know how that affinity threshold compares to the effective thresholds during the sorting stages in bone marrow etc.?There is a rough affinity threshold that determines that an antibody at least might do something pathological. I forget what it is but a dissociation constant of 10 ^-8 sticks in my mind.
In addition to what Jonathan said, you can also do BCR sequencing like was done in one of the studies from Audrey Ryback. It won’t tell you what antigen the antibody is for (unless it’s similar to a sequenced antibody for a known antigen), but that would give you evidence of clonal expansion. (In layman’s terms, if a B cell receptor binds to an antigen and bypasses self tolerance, it will start cloning itself and you’ll end up with a large proportion of very similar sequences in your data).Don't you have to know what antibody you're looking for? Surely an assay can't contain every single human protein, so it doesn't seem like failing to find autoantibodies with these assays would be evidence that there aren't any clinically meaningful ones.
Do we know how that affinity threshold compares to the effective thresholds during the sorting stages in bone marrow etc.?
Are they caused by the same physics, so the thresholds are similar, or are there some kind of buffers of sort to weed out almost auto-reactive as well?