| Literature DB >> 27788675 |
Sven Jarius1, Klemens Ruprecht2, Ingo Kleiter3, Nadja Borisow4,5, Nasrin Asgari6, Kalliopi Pitarokoili3, Florence Pache4,5, Oliver Stich7, Lena-Alexandra Beume7, Martin W Hümmert8, Corinna Trebst8, Marius Ringelstein9, Orhan Aktas9, Alexander Winkelmann10, Mathias Buttmann11, Alexander Schwarz12, Hanna Zimmermann2, Alexander U Brandt2, Diego Franciotta13, Marco Capobianco14, Joseph Kuchling2, Jürgen Haas12, Mirjam Korporal-Kuhnke12, Soeren Thue Lillevang15, Kai Fechner16, Kathrin Schanda17, Friedemann Paul4,5, Brigitte Wildemann12, Markus Reindl17.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Antibodies to myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG-IgG) have been suggested to play a role in a subset of patients with neuromyelitis optica and related disorders.Entities:
Keywords: Antibody index; Aquaporin-4 antibodies (AQP4-IgG); Autoantibodies; Cell-based assays; Cerebrospinal fluid; Devic’s syndrome; Longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis (LETM); Multiple sclerosis; Myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibodies (MOG-IgG); Neuromyelitis optica antibodies (NMO-IgG); Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders (NMOSD); Neuromyelitis optica (NMO); Optic neuritis; Transverse Myelitis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27788675 PMCID: PMC5084340 DOI: 10.1186/s12974-016-0717-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Demographic and serological findings from 522 subjects and 614 serum samples tested for MOG-IgG
| Diagnostic categories | Sample numbers | Patient numbers | Sex ratio (m:f) | Age (ys), median | MOG-IgG+, samples | MOG-IgG+, patients | MOG-IgG+, median§ | AQP4-IgG +, MOG-IgG + patients |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group I | 386 | 300 | 1:2.4 | 39 | 95/386 (24.6 %) | 50/300 (16.7 %) | 1:640 | 0/50 (0 %) |
| “ON and/or MY”a | 281 | 202 | 95/281 (33.8 %) | 50/202 (24.8 %) | 1:640 | 0/50 (0 %) | ||
| “ON and MY”a | 79 | 54 | 39/79 (49.4 %) | 22/54 (40.7 %) | 1:1280 | 0/22 (0 %) | ||
| “mON/rON”a | 145 | 103 | 47/145 (32.4 %) | 22/103 (21.4 %) | 1:640 | 0/22 (0 %) | ||
| “mON”a | 69 | 66 | 10/69 (14.5 %) | 9/66 (13.6 %) | 1:800 | 0/9 (0 %) | ||
| “rON”a | 76 | 37 | 37/76 (48.7 %) | 13/37 (35.1 %) | 1:640 | 0/13 (0 %) | ||
| “MY” (all LETM)a | 57 | 45 | 9/57 (15.8 %) | 6/45 (13.3 %) | 1:2560 | 0/6 (0 %) | ||
| “MS”a | 58 | 54 | 0/58 (0 %) | 0/54 (0 %) | N.a. | N.a. | ||
| “OND”a | 47 | 44 | 0/47 (0 %) | 0/44 (0 %) | N.a. | N.a. | ||
| Group II | 89 | 83 | 1:1.9 | 46 | 0/89 (0 %) | 0/83 (0 %) | N.a. | 89/89 (100 %) |
| AQP4+ NMO | 59 | 56 | 0/59 (0 %) | 0/56 (0 %) | N.a. | 59/59 (100 %) | ||
| AQP4+ rON | 5 | 5 | 0/25 (0 %) | 0/22 (0 %) | N.a. | 25/25 (100 %) | ||
| AQP4+ LETM | 25 | 22 | 0/5 (0 %) | 0/5 (0 %) | N.a. | 5/5 (100 %) | ||
| Group III | 85 | 85 | 1:3 | 38 | 0/85 (0 %) | 0/85 (0 %) | N.a. | N.a. |
| RRMS | 73 | 73 | 0/73 (0 %) | 0/73 (0 %) | N.a. | N.a. | ||
| SPMS | 9 | 9 | 0/9 (0 %) | 0/9 (0 %) | N.a. | N.a. | ||
| PPMS | 3 | 3 | 0/3 (0 %) | 0/3 (0 %) | N.a. | N.a. | ||
| Group IV | 54 | 54 | 1:1.3 | 38 | 1/54 (1.9 %) | 1/54 (1.9 %) | 1:320* | 0/1 (0 %) |
| OND | 9 | 9 | 1/9 (11.1 %) | 1/9 (11.1 %) | 1:320* | 0/1 (0 %) | ||
| HC | 45 | 45 | 0/45 (0 %) | 0/45 (0 %) | N.a. | N.a. | ||
| Group II–IV | 228 | 222 | 1:1.9 | 38 | 1/228 (0.5 %) | 1/222 (0.5 %) | 1:320* | 0/1 (0 %) |
| Total | 614 | 522 | 1:2.6 | 38 | 96/614 (15.6 %) | 51/522 (9.8 %) | 1:640 | 0/51 (0 %) |
N.a not applicable, ON optic neuritis, mON monophasic ON, rON recurrent ON, MY myelitis, LETM longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis, MS multiple sclerosis, OND other neurological disorders, RRMS relapsing remitting MS, SPMS secondary progressive MS, PPMS primary progressive MS, HC healthy control. aSuspected diagnosis at the time of sample referral. §MOG-IgG-positive samples only. *Single patient
Fig. 1MOG-IgG as detected by two independent cell-based assays (CBA): typical findings. a, b Binding of serum IgG from a group I patient (a) but not from a control patient (b) to live HEK293A cells transfected with human full-length MOG. c, d Binding of serum IgG from a group I patient to formalin-fixed HEK293 cells transfected with full-length MOG (c) but not to their mock-transfected counterpart (d) in a commercial CBA. Bound MOG-IgG was visualized in the live-cell assay using a Cy3-conjugated goat anti-human IgG antibody and in the fixed-cell assay by use of a fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-labeled goat anti-human IgG antibody
Fig. 2Frequency and titers of MOG-IgG in 614 serum samples from 522 subjects as detected using a live-cell CBA. MOG-IgG was detected in 95/386 (24.6 %) samples in group I but was almost completely absent among 228 control samples (groups II–IV), including 89 samples from AQP4-IgG-positive patients, 85 samples from patients with MS according to the McDonald criteria (group III), and 54 samples from healthy controls and OND patients (group IV). While all low-titer samples (1:160–1:320) in group I were positive also in the fixed-cell CBA, the only positive control sample (from group IV) was negative in the fixed-cell CBA, suggesting a false-positive test result. The horizontal dashed line indicates the assay-specific cut-off (> = 1:160)
Fig. 3MOG-IgG serum titers in 386 samples from 300 patients included in group I. Diagnoses are given as provided by the referring centers. ON and MY = optic neuritis and myelitis; mON = monophasic optic neuritis; rON = recurrent ON; LETM = longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis; MS = multiple sclerosis; OND = other neurological disorders
Fig. 4MOG-IgG titers and disease activity. Titers were significantly higher during acute attacks than during remission in the total cohort (a) as well as in individual patients with available follow-up sera (b). Horizontal lines and whiskers in panel a indicate median titers and interquartile ranges, respectively. The median interval between samples in the right panel was 16.5 months (range 2–103). Note that panel b shows maximum titers detected during acute attacks and minimum titers detected in follow-up sera. The difference was also significant if not the remission sample with the lowest titer but that with the longest time interval since attack onset was used (median 1:1280 vs. 1:320; p < 0.009; not shown)
Fig. 5MOG-IgG titers and clinical presentation. Titers were higher during attacks involving myelitis than in attacks not involving myelitis (a), and higher during attacks involving simultaneous ON and myelitis than in attacks of isolated myelitis or isolated ON (b). The horizontal lines indicate median titers. ON = optic neuritis; MY = myelitis
Fig. 6MOG-IgG titers and treatment status. While median MOG-IgG titers were lower during remission than during acute attacks in the treated subgroup (a), a similarly significant difference was also observed in the untreated subgroup (b). By contrast, no significant difference in median titers was observed between treated and untreated patients, neither during acute attacks nor during remission (not shown)
MOG-IgG, MOG-IgG1, MOG-IgM, and MOG-IgA results from 21 samples
| No | MOG-IgG1 | MOG-IgG | MOG-IgM | MOG-IgA | Disease status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | POS | POS | NEG | NEG | Relapse |
| 2 | POS | POS | NEG | NEG | Relapse |
| 3A | POS | POS | NEG | NEG | Relapse |
| 3B | POS | POS | NEG | NEG | Remission |
| 4 | POS | POS | NEG | NEG | Remission |
| 5 | POS | POS | NEG | NEG | Remission |
| 6 | POS | POS | NEG | NEG | Remission |
| 7 | POS | POS | NEG | NEG | Remission |
| 8 | POS | POS | NEG | NEG | Relapse |
| 9A | POS | POS | NEG | NEG | Relapse |
| 9B | n.d. | POS | NEG | NEG | Remission |
| 10A | POS | POS | NEG | NEG | Relapse |
| 10B | n.d. | POS | NEG | NEG | Remission |
| 11 | n.d. | POS | NEG | NEG | Relapse |
| 12 | n.d. | POS | NEG | NEG | Remission |
| 13 | n.d. | POS | NEG | NEG | Remission |
| 14A | n.d. | POS 1:1000 | POS 1:20 | NEG | Relapse |
| 14B | n.d. | POS 1:100 | POS 1:10 | NEG | Remission |
| 15A | n.d. | POS | NEG | NEG | Remission |
| 15B | n.d. | POS | NEG | NEG | Remission |
| 16 | POS | POS | n.d. | n.d. | Relapse |
| 17 | POS | POS | n.d. | n.d. | Relapse |
| 18 | POS | POS | n.d. | n.d. | Relapse |
MOG-IgG was determined using a commercial fixed CBA (cut-off 1:10). MOG-IgG1 was also present in 3/3 CSF samples from MOG-IgG1-seropositive patients (not shown). POS positive, NEG negative, n.d not done
Lack of evidence for intrathecal IgG synthesis in 17 CSF samples from 15
| Sample no. | MOG-IgG titer, serum | MOG-IgG titer, CSF | MOG-IgG titer required for AI >4 | Evidence for intrathecal MOG-IgG synthesis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | 1:10240 | 1:64 | 1:925.7 | No |
| #2 | 1:2560 | 1:4 | 1:25.6 | No |
| #3 | 1:320 | 1:2 | 1:2.3 | No |
| #4 | 1:10240 | 1:16 | 1:152.5 | No |
| #5 | 1:640 | 1:4 | 1:9 | No |
| #6 | 1:2560 | 1:4 | 1:30.7 | No |
| #7 | 1:10240 | 1:16 | 1:176.1 | No |
| #8 | 1:2560 | 1:2 | 1:19.5 | No |
| #9 | 1:320 | 1:2 | 1:3.6 | No |
| #10 | 1:1280 | 1:2 | 1:9.4 | No |
| #11 | 1:2560 | 1:4 | 1:25 | No |
| #12 | 1:320 | 1:4 | 1:6 | No |
| #13a | 1:1280 | NEG | 1:17.4 | No |
| #14 | 1:320 | NEG | 1:3.7 | No |
| #15 | 1:1280 | NEG | 1:10.2 | No |
| #16 | 1:160 | NEG | 1:2.1 | No |
| #17b | 1:1280 | NEG | 1:10.2 | No |
MOG-IgG seropositive patients with ON and/or myelitis. NEG negative. aFollow-up to sample #1; b follow-up to sample #2
Fig. 7MOG-specific antibody index (AI). Calculation of the MOG-specific AI in 17 paired CSF/serum samples from 15 MOG-IgG-positive patients did not reveal evidence for intrathecal synthesis of MOG-IgG. The dotted line indicates the upper limit of the reference range (AI = 4). Inset: Reiber diagram [40] demonstrating absence of total IgG intrathecal synthesis in 16 samples from 14 patients and presence of blood-CSF barrier dysfunction in 6/17 samples. QIgG = CSF/serum total IgG ratio; QMOG-IgG = CSF/serum MOG-IgG ratio; QAlb = CSF/serum albumin ratio; Qlim = upper reference range of QIgG (see methods section for details)
Fig. 8MOG-IgG1 as detected in the fixed-cell CBA. a, b Binding of serum IgG1 antibodies (from a patient with recurrent optic neuritis) to HEK293 cells transfected with human full-length MOG (a), but not to mock-transfected HEK293 cells (b). c Negative control serum (from a patient with RRMS) binding neither to the MOG-transfected cells (upper panel) nor to the mock-transfected control cells (lower panel). Bound patient IgG1 was detected by successive incubation with an unlabeled sheep anti-human IgG1 secondary antibody and an AlexaFluore®568-labeled donkey anti-sheep IgG antibody (red fluorescence). Cell nuclei were stained with 4’,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (blue fluorescence)