| Literature DB >> 28115470 |
Bethan Lang1, Mateusz Makuch1, Teresa Moloney1, Inga Dettmann2, Swantje Mindorf2, Christian Probst2, Winfried Stoecker2, Camilla Buckley1, Charles R Newton3, M Isabel Leite1, Paul Maddison4, Lars Komorowski2, Jane Adcock1, Angela Vincent1, Patrick Waters1, Sarosh R Irani1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Autoantibodies against the extracellular domains of the voltage-gated potassium channel (VGKC) complex proteins, leucine-rich glioma-inactivated 1 (LGI1) and contactin-associated protein-2 (CASPR2), are found in patients with limbic encephalitis, faciobrachial dystonic seizures, Morvan's syndrome and neuromyotonia. However, in routine testing, VGKC complex antibodies without LGI1 or CASPR2 reactivities (double-negative) are more common than LGI1 or CASPR2 specificities. Therefore, the target(s) and clinical associations of double-negative antibodies need to be determined.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28115470 PMCID: PMC5644714 DOI: 10.1136/jnnp-2016-314758
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry ISSN: 0022-3050 Impact factor: 10.154
Figure 1Detection of VGKC complex antibodies and antibodies to dendrotoxin. (A) VGKC complex antibodies were determined from 1131 samples, including those with known VGKC complex antibodies (both with (n=84) and without (n=27) LGI1 or CASPR2 reactivities), and unselected patients with adult-onset epilepsies, infectious diseases, autonomic syndromes, LEMS, Hu, healthy smokers and HC. Samples with LGI1 antibodies (n=69), CASPR2 antibodies (n=21) and all available samples with VGKC complex antibody levels above 100 pM and unknown antigenic targets (red; n=72) were carried forward to other assays. Dotted lines represent this cut-off and the 400 pM cut-off from a previous study;4 (B) 10 of the 72 samples with unknown antigens immunoprecipitated substantial quantities of of 125I-αDTX alone (dotted line at 137 pM represents the mean plus three standard deviations from 20 HCs). Three serum samples from a snake handler (grey dots) also had antibodies to 125I-αDTX; (C) 125I-αDTX antibody levels correlated with their corresponding VGKC complex antibody levels (r=0.54, p=0.015, Spearman's rank correlation). 125I-αDTX, radioiodinated α-dendrotoxin; CASPR2, contactin-associated protein-2; HC, healthy controls; Hu, Hu antibodies; LEMS, Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome; LGI1, leucine-rich glioma-inactivated 1; VGKC, voltage-gated potassium channel.
Figure 2Kv1 antibodies target intracellular epitopes. (A) Twenty-seven of the remaining 62 patients with unknown VGKC complex antigenic targets precipitated either 125I-αDTX-labelled Kv1.1/Kv1.2/Kv1.6 co-transfected HEK cell extracts (red circles) or 125I-αDTX-labelled Kv1.2-transfected HEK cell extracts (red circles with black outline). No sera with LGI1 or CASPR2 antibodies showed positive results. HEK cells transfected with Kv1.1 alone or Kv1.6 alone did not bind 125I-αDTX in solution; (B) a commercial antibody to the extracellular domain of Kv1.1 (anti-Kv1.1e) labelled the cell surface of live HEK cells co-transfected with Kv1.1, Kv1.2 and Kv1.6 (and enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP)). No patient antibodies (n=175, including the 62 double-negative samples without αDTX reactivity) showed similar binding to these live cells or live cells expressing only one of these subunits; (C) binding to fixed Kv1-transfected HEK cells was seen using serum samples which precipitated Kv1s from solution. This co-localised with binding of commercial antibodies against the intracellular domain of Kv1.2 (anti-Kv1.2). Examples for Kv1.2 and Kv1.6 are shown in online supplementary figure S1C. Scale bar=10 microns. 125I-αDTX, radioiodinated α-dendrotoxin; CASPR2, contactin-associated protein-2; HEK, human embryonic kidney 293T; LGI1, leucine-rich glioma-inactivated 1; VGKC, voltage-gated potassium channel.
Figure 3Summary of the sequential flow of assays through the study. As shown in figure 1A, 1131 samples were initially tested for VGKC complex antibodies by RIA (VGKC complex RIA, A) and subsequently using LGI1 and CASPR2 antibody live CBAs (B), live neuronal cultures (C) and precipitation of αDTX (αDTX RIA, D). As detailed in figure 2, double-negative samples were then tested for binding to the extracellular domains of live Kv1-tranfected HEK cells (Kv1-live CBA), for immunoprecipitations of 125I-αDTX-labelled Kv1-transfected HEK cells (Kv1-HEK RIA, E) and for binding to fixed permeabilised Kv1-transfected HEK cells (Kv1-fixed CBA). Cohorts are defined in more detail in the Methods section and online supplementary table S1. 125I-αDTX, radioiodinated α-dendrotoxin; CASPR2, contactin-associated protein-2; CBA, cell-based assay; HEK, human embryonic kidney 293T; Hu, Hu antibodies; LEMS, Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome; LGI1, leucine-rich glioma-inactivated 1; RIA, radioimmunoassay; VGKC, voltage-gated potassium channel.
Figure 4Molecular and clinical features associated with double-negative VGKC complex antibodies. (A) The illustration of study results demonstrates that the antibodies with pathogenic potential (blue and green) target the extracellular domains of LGI1 and CASPR2, respectively, whereas likely non-pathogenic antibodies (red) target the intracellular domain of Kv1 channels, especially Kv1.2, and the α-dendrotoxin molecule itself (yellow), which is not present in mammalian tissue. Other intracellular targets may include the Kv-β2 subunit (pink). (B) The patients with intracellular Kv1 antibodies had no clear peak age of onset, and (C) 12 showed varied, known diagnoses (*), and 15 had conditions of unknown aetiology, unlikely to be autoimmune. CASPR2, contactin-associated protein-2; HS, hippocampal sclerosis; LGI1, leucine-rich glioma-inactivated 1; VGKC, voltage-gated potassium channel.
Clinical–serological details of patients with antibodies against the intracellular aspects of Kv1.1, Kv1.2 and/or Kv1.6
| Serological results | Clinical features | Disease aetiology | Outcome and treatments | Summary of clinical–serological correlations | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age/Sex | VGKC complex antibody (pM) | Kv1-HEK RIA | Kv1-fixed CBA | ||||
| 59/M | 1346 | + | 1.2 only | Cryptogenic TLE with amnesia/depression | Unknown | No sustained response to three AEDs and CS | Poor. Persistent VGKC-c Abs despite markedly varied SZ frequencies. Online |
| 49/F | 767 | + | 1.2 only | NMT with EMG confirmation | Autoimmune | Limited response to AEDs and CS | Poor. Highest VGKC-c Abs during clinical remission |
| 55/M | 533 | + | 1.2 only | NMT with EMG confirmation | Autoimmune | Symptoms over 8 years despite AEDs/AZA/CS | Good. Patient symptomatic with persistent VGKC-c Abs |
| 77/M | 470 | + | 1.2 only | Chronic myelopathy/encephalopathy | Unknown | Transient response to CS and PLEX | Poor. High VGKC-c Abs despite symptom fluctuations over 3 years |
| 21/M | 461 | + | 1.2 only | Cryptogenic probable frontal lobe epilepsy | Unknown | Ongoing SZs despite two AEDs | Poor. Online |
| 50/M | 448 | + | 1.2 only | Isolated amnesia | Unknown | Spontaneous resolution over a few days | Poor. Abs reduced over 12 months. Symptoms resolved at 7 days |
| 28/F | 278 | + | 1.2 only | Cryptogenic TLE | Unknown | SZ freedom after first AED | Poor. Persistent VGKC-c Abs during SZ freedom |
| 62/M | 236 | + | 1.2 only | Cryptogenic TLE with amnesia | Unknown | SZs and amnesia at 5 years with 3 AEDs | Poor. VGKC-c Abs disappeared while SZs were ongoing |
| 18/M | 141 | + | 1.2 only | Limbic encephalitis | Autoimmune | Good response to CS and PLEX | Good. VGKC-c Abs reduced and clinical improvement at 12 months |
| 25/F | 529 | + | 1.6 only | Diffuse neuropathic pain and depression | Unknown | No response to opioids, CS or IVIG | Poor. High VGKC-c Abs despite marked fluctuations in symptoms |
| 30/F | 117 | + | 1.6 only | Idiopathic generalised epilepsy | Genetic | Good response to AEDs | NA |
| 68/M | 240 | + | 1.6 only | Alzheimer's disease; one SZ | Degenerative | Ongoing fall in memory despite CS/IVIG | Poor. Slight fall in VGKC-c Abs but marked reduction in memory over 4 years |
| 34/M | 577 | + | 1.2 and 1.6 | Widespread neuropathic pain | Unknown | No response to CS, IVIG and PLEX | Poor. Constant pain despite highly varied VGKC-c Abs. Online |
| 71/F | 2489 | + | 1.1, 1.2 and 1.6 | NMT plus SCLC | Paraneoplastic | Palliative care only | NA. |
| 67/F | 2120 | + | 1.1, 1.2 and 1.6 | LEMS plus Hu antibody neuropathy and SCLC | Paraneoplastic | Good response to CS | Poor. Persistently high VGKC-c Abs over 5 years despite clinical improvements |
| 84/F | 282 | + | 1.1 only | Parkinson's disease dementia | Degenerative | No response to CS | Poor. VGKC-c Abs reduced over 12 months despite clinical worsening |
| 58/M | 304 | + | Negative | Dysautonomia | Unknown | NA | NA |
| 37/M | 253 | + | Negative | TLE related to left HS | Structural | NA | NA |
| 59/M | 236 | + | Negative | Healthy smoker | Healthy | Not relevant | Not relevant |
| 48/F | 223 | + | Negative | TLE related to left HS | Structural | NA | NA |
| 85/F | 205 | + | Negative | Cryptogenic focal motor SZs | Unknown | SZ free on 1 AED. Amnesia and anxiety benefited from CS/IVIG | Poor. VGKC-c Abs disappeared over 1 year; SZ freedom at 2 years. VGKC-c Abs returned at 4 years without SZs |
| 33/F | 182 | + | Negative | Cryptogenic TLE | Unknown | SZ freedom after second AED | Moderate. VGKC-c Abs reduced over 6 months and SZ freedom at 1 year |
| 76/M | 181 | + | Negative | Cryptogenic epilepsy | Unknown | SZ freedom with 1 AED | Poor. SZ freedom at 6 months; VGKC-c Abs sampled after 15 years |
| 54/F | 139 | + | Negative | Epilepsy after childhood meningitis | Structural | NA | NA |
| 22/M | 137 | + | Negative | Cryptogenic epilepsy | Unknown | SZ freedom after 1 AED | NA |
| 54/M | 131 | + | Negative | Cryptogenic epilepsy | Unknown | SZ free at 1 year with 1 AED | Moderate. SZ free at 1 year; VGKC-c Abs absent at 3 months |
| 77/M | 123 | + | Negative | TLE secondary to CVA | Structural | Ongoing SZs at 4 years | NA |
Patients grouped by the VGKC-c antibody levels, precipitation from Kv1.1/Kv1.2/Kv1.6-cotransfected HEK cell and Kv1.2-transfected HEK cell radioimmunoassays (Kv1-HEK RIA; denoted as positive (+) or negative (−)) and the Kv1 subunit expressed fixed CBAs (Kv1-fixed CBA). All these patients had negative results in live CBAs for antibodies against Kv1s, LGI1, CASPR2, contactin-2 and for binding to live hippocampal neurons. Two patients had SCLC and tumours were not found in the remaining patients.
Ab, antibody; AEDs, antiepileptic drugs; AZA, azathioprine; CASPR2, contactin-associated protein-2; CS, corticosteroids; CBA, cell-based assay; CVA, cerebrovascular accident; EMG, electromyography; F, female; HEK, human embryonic kidney 293T; HS, hippocampal sclerosis; IVIG, intravenous immunoglobulins; LEMS, Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome; LGI1, leucine-rich glioma-inactivated 1; M, male; NA, not available (only single serum sample obtained); PLEX, plasma exchange; SCLC, small cell lung carcinomas; SZ, seizure; TLE, temporal lobe epilepsy; VGKC, voltage-gated potassium channel; VGKC-c, VGKC complex.