Abstract: Ojective: The objective of the study is to determine the frequency and the clinical significance of autoantibodies to the pericentromeric heterochromatin protein 1 (HP1). So far this antinuclear antibody specificity has been mainly reported in patients with the CREST syndrome.Methods: We screened the sera of 199 individuals, including patients suffering from various autoimmune disorders (Group I, n=145) and non autoimmune diseases (Group II, n=44 patients) as well as healthy individuals (Group III, n=30). The sera were systematically tested by Western blot and ELISA using a GST–HP1α fusion protein as an antigen.Results: Anti-HP1 antibodies were detected in 32% of patients in Group I, 11.3% in Group II and 3.3% of individuals in Group III. They could be detected in sera containing or not antinuclear antibodies detectable by indirect immunofluorescence. Anti-HP1 antibodies were mostly associated with the CREST and Sjogren's syndromes (70% and 44.4%, respectively). They could also be detected in 22.2% of patients suffering from various other autoimmune diseases. However, their negative predictive value was 94% in the CREST syndrome.Conclusion: Anti-HP1 autoantibodies are associated with a large spectrum of disorders. However, they have a diagnostic value in the CREST syndrome.Highlights: