| Literature DB >> 24501693 |
Béatrice Sl Pignolet1, Christina Mt Gebauer2, Roland S Liblau1.
Abstract
Paraneoplastic neurological disorders (PNDs) are syndromes that develop in cancer patients when an efficient antitumor immune response, directed against antigens expressed by both malignant cells and healthy neurons, damages the nervous system. Herein, we analyze existing data on the mechanisms of loss of self tolerance and nervous tissue damage that underpin one of the most frequent PNDs, the anti-Hu syndrome. In addition, we discuss future directions and propose potential strategies aimed at blocking deleterious encephalitogenic immune responses while preserving the antineoplastic potential of treatment.Entities:
Keywords: anti-Hu syndrome; autoimmunity; cancer; central nervous system; paraneoplastic neurological disorder
Year: 2013 PMID: 24501693 PMCID: PMC3913668 DOI: 10.4161/onci.27384
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncoimmunology ISSN: 2162-4011 Impact factor: 8.110

Figure 1. Detection of autoantibodies associated with the anti-Hu syndrome. (A) Patient sera containing Hu-specific autoantibodies specifically recognize neurons in the central nervous system (CNS) (magnification 200 ×). Briefly, hippocampal (left panels) and cerebellar (right panels) rat slices (EuroImmun) were incubated with serum from either an individual not affected by paraneoplastic neurological disorders (PNDs) (negative control), either a patient with a confirmed anti-Hu syndrome (positive control), or a subject suspected to suffer from the anti-Hu syndrome, followed by the detection of bound IgG using biotinylated goat anti-human IgG, ABC and VIP kits (Eurobio). The test serum turned out to contain anti-neuron antibodies exhibiting a staining pattern compatible with that of anti-Hu antibodies. (B) The molecular identification of the specificity of such neuron-specific IgGs is made by immunoblotting-based diagnostic tests. Patient-derived serum (1/100 dilution) and cerebrospinal fluid (when available) are incubated on a membrane stripped (right panel) with paraneoplastic neurological syndrome-associated antigens, including amphiphysin, CV2, PNMA2 (Ma2/Ta), Ri, Yo, and Hu proteins (EuroImmun). Upon washing, bound IgGs are detected using alkaline phosphatase-conjugated anti-human IgG antibodies and their position is confronted to a reference scheme.

Figure 2. Immunopathogenesis of the anti-Hu syndrome. An anti-Hu syndrome occurs when a vigorous immune response develops against the normally neuron-restricted antigen HuD ectopically expressed by an underlying tumor, most often small-cell lung carcinoma (SCLC). Tissue-resident dendritic cells capture antigens derived from malignant cells, including HuD (A). After the homing of these dendritic cells to tumor-draining lymph nodes, tumor-associated antigens, including HuD, are processed and presented to activate antigen-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells (B). The activation of tumor-specific T cells may also occur within neoplastic lesions. In either case, tumor-specific T cells can reach neoplastic lesions. As cancer cells sometimes express MHC class I molecules and likely present HuD-derived peptides, they become attractive targets for HuD-specific CD8+ T cell killing. Partial (or in rare cases complete) control of the tumor growth is therefore afforded (C). In parallel, the HuD-specific T cells activated in tumor-draining lymph nodes and/or within neoplastic lesions, circulate and acquire the capacity to cross the blood-brain-barrier (D). In the central nervous system (CNS), neurons can also express MHC class I molecules, in particular under inflammatory conditions, and can therefore present peptides derived from the highly homologous HuD, HuB, HuC proteins. Thus, neurons become additional targets for HuD-specific CD8+ T cells, resulting in neuronal tissue damage and the related paraneoplastic neurological manifestations (E).