| Literature DB >> 28533781 |
Patrick Peschl1, Monika Bradl2, Romana Höftberger3, Thomas Berger1, Markus Reindl1.
Abstract
Myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG), a member of the immunoglobulin (Ig) superfamily, is a myelin protein solely expressed at the outermost surface of myelin sheaths and oligodendrocyte membranes. This makes MOG a potential target of cellular and humoral immune responses in inflammatory demyelinating diseases. Due to its late postnatal developmental expression, MOG is an important marker for oligodendrocyte maturation. Discovered about 30 years ago, it is one of the best-studied autoantigens for experimental autoimmune models for multiple sclerosis (MS). Human studies, however, have yielded controversial results on the role of MOG, especially MOG antibodies (Abs), as a biomarker in MS. But with improved detection methods using different expression systems to detect Abs in patients' samples, this is meanwhile no longer the case. Using cell-based assays with recombinant full-length, conformationally intact MOG, several recent studies have revealed that MOG Abs can be found in a subset of predominantly pediatric patients with acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM), aquaporin-4 (AQP4) seronegative neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders (NMOSD), monophasic or recurrent isolated optic neuritis (ON), or transverse myelitis, in atypical MS and in N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor-encephalitis with overlapping demyelinating syndromes. Whereas MOG Abs are only transiently observed in monophasic diseases such as ADEM and their decline is associated with a favorable outcome, they are persistent in multiphasic ADEM, NMOSD, recurrent ON, or myelitis. Due to distinct clinical features within these diseases it is controversially disputed to classify MOG Ab-positive cases as a new disease entity. Neuropathologically, the presence of MOG Abs is characterized by MS-typical demyelination and oligodendrocyte pathology associated with Abs and complement. However, it remains unclear whether MOG Abs are a mere inflammatory bystander effect or truly pathogenetic. This article provides deeper insight into recent developments, the clinical relevance of MOG Abs and their role in the immunpathogenesis of inflammatory demyelinating disorders.Entities:
Keywords: MOG; autoantibodies; demyelination; inflammation; myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein
Year: 2017 PMID: 28533781 PMCID: PMC5420591 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.00529
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
The effects of myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG)-specific antibodies (Abs).
| Reference | Year | Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Trotter et al. ( | 1986 | Myelin-specific Abs trigger macrophage-mediated demyelination |
| Linington and Lassmann ( | 1987 | Ab-mediated demyelination in a chronic relapsing experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) in guinea pigs |
| Schluesener et al. ( | 1887 | Monoclonal MOG Abs induced fatal relapses in a model of chronic relapsing-remitting EAE in SJL mice and enhanced acute EAE in Lewis (LEW) rats with increased inflammation and demyelination |
| Lassmann et al. ( | 1988 | Demyelination occurs in a synergistic way between cellular (T cells) and humoral immune mechanisms |
| Linington et al. ( | 1988 | MOG Abs augment demyelination in a myelin basic protein (MBP) T cell-mediated EAE model in LEW rats |
| Kerlero de Rosbo et al. ( | 1990 | Monoclonal MOG Abs together with complement lead to demyelination and MBP loss in brain cells |
| Scolding and Compston ( | 1991 | Abs mediate macrophage-dependent phagocytosis of oligodendrocytes |
| Vass et al. ( | 1992 | MOG Ab-mediated demyelination is intensified by interferon-gamma |
| Linington et al. ( | 1992 | Abs prevent tolarization effect of repeatedly induced MBP-T cell-mediated EAE and enhances demyelination |
| Piddlesden et al. ( | 1993 | Ab-mediated demyelination is dependent on complement recruiting ability and independent on its epitope recognition |
| Genain et al. ( | 1995 | MOG Abs facilitate demyelination in MOG-induced EAE in common marmosets |
| Johns et al. ( | 1995 | MOG Abs lead to degradation of MBP and increased myelin protease activity |
| Ichikawa et al. ( | 1996 | MOG35–55 encephalitogenic in LEW rats and a potential target for Ab-mediated demyelination |
| Menon et al. ( | 1997 | Ab induced MBP loss and myelin destabilization by neutral proteases in human myelin |
| Van der Goes et al. ( | 1999 | Abs to MOG play a crucial role for the phagocytosis of myelin by macrophages |
| Von Budingen et al. ( | 2002 | Ab pathogenicity in marmosets is dependent on their ability to bind on conformational epitopes |
| Marta et al. ( | 2003 | Ab cross-linking on oligodendrocyte cultures leads to the formation of lipid rafts and to a reconstitution of MOG |
| Bourquin et al. ( | 2003 | Generation of pathogenic Abs to conformational MOG in H-2b mice is dependent on genes encoded within the major histocompatibility complex |
| Von Budingen et al. ( | 2004 | EAE phenotype in marmosets correlates with the availability of conformational MOG Abs resulting in typical multiple sclerosis-like disease pattern. In addition Abs to MOG peptides lead to focal disease pattern in brain stem and spinal cord. MBP T cell-mediated EAE animals showed no demyelination when injected with MOG peptides. By contrast, conformational MOG Abs were more pathologic as controls |
| Marta et al. ( | 2005 | Human but not rat MOG-induced B cell-dependent EAE in MOG primed C57BL/6 mice and Abs of hMOG immunized mice only lead to EAE formation in B cell-deficient mice. Pathogenic Abs react to conformational intact and glycosylated antigen only |
| Zhou et al. ( | 2006 | Patient-derived MOG Abs enhance demyelination in rat EAE models |
| Urich et al. ( | 2006 | Ab-mediated demyelination is FcR independent but completely relies on complement activation |
| Jagessar et al. ( | 2008 | Increased Ab-dependent demyelination in marmosets immunized with murine myelin compared to myelin lacking MOG |
| Harrer et al. ( | 2009 | Complement induced demyelination in a murine |
| Ohtani et al. ( | 2011 | Ab titer against conformational MOG are directly associated with EAE activity and demyelination in EAE rats |
| Mader et al. ( | 2011 | Human MOG Abs lead to complement activated cytotoxicity in HEK293A cells |
| de Graaf et al. ( | 2012 | Correct refolding of MOG increases its pathogenicity by generating conformation-dependent MOG Abs |
| Dale et al. ( | 2014 | Oligodendrocytes incubated with purified human MOG IgG lead to organizational disturbances of the thin filaments and microtubule cytoskeleton |
| Saadoun et al. ( | 2014 | Patient-derived MOG IgG lead to complement-independent myelin changes and altered expression of axonal proteins, but did not trigger inflammation or cellular death |
| Flach et al. ( | 2016 | MOG Abs boost EAE by activation of effector T cells |
| Kinzel et al. ( | 2016 | MOG Abs are able to trigger spontaneous EAE in mice harboring endogenous MOG-specific T cells in the absence of B cells |
T cell responses against myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) animal models.
| Reference | Year | Finding |
|---|---|---|
| Linington et al. ( | 1993 | MOG peptide (MOG44–53) specific T cells induce atypical EAE in Lewis (LEW) rats |
| Amor et al. ( | 1994 | Epitope MOG1–22, MOG43–57, and MOG134–148 induce clinically and pathological relevant EAE, however, mild effects in AB/H mice. Epitope MOG92–106 is highly encephalitogenic in SJL mice |
| Adelmann et al. ( | 1995 | N-terminal domain (MOG1–125) leads to demyelination in LEW rats, T cells reactive to epitope MOG1–20 and MOG35–55 are only weakly encephalitogenic in EAE model |
| Kerlero de Rosbo et al. ( | 1995 | Mild pathological signs were detected by inducing MOG35–55 in PL/J mice |
| Mendel et al. ( | 1995 | MOG35–55 induces highly reproducible EAE in C57BL/6J and C3H.SW (H-2b) mice |
| Devaux et al. ( | 1997 | Severe EAE with truncated human MOG (1–120) in SJL and (PLJ × SJL) F1 mice, encephalitogenic T cell proliferation against epitope MOG92–106 |
| Slavin et al. ( | 1998 | Relapsing-remitting disease course in NOD/Lt mice (H-2g7) and chronic paralytic disease course in C57BL/6 mice after injection of MOG35–55 |
| Weissert et al. ( | 1998 | Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) haplotype influences the degree of disease susceptibility, recruitment of MOG-specific immune cells, and pathology in MOG-induced EAE rats |
| Storch et al. ( | 1998 | Immunization with MOG antigen in rats is able to mimic classical multiple sclerosis (MS) as well and variants such as optic neuritis (ON), Devic’s and Marburg’s disease |
| Encinas et al. ( | 1999 | Active immunization with MOG35–55 induces relapsing-remitting EAE followed by a secondary progression in NOD mice |
| Raine et al. ( | 1999 | MOG-induced EAE in marmosets lead to vesicular disruption and production of antigen-specific autoantibodies similar to MS |
| Abdul-Majid et al. ( | 2000 | MOG79–96 is highly encephalitogenic in DBA/1 mice, including macrophage infiltration and demyelination |
| Kerlero de Rosbo et al. ( | 2000 | rhMOG-EAE induced marmosets with different MHC background showed proliferative T cell responses against epitopes MOG4–20, MOG35–50, and MOG94–116 |
| Bourquin et al. ( | 2000 | MOG-DNA vaccination lead to severe EAE |
| Brok et al. ( | 2000 | Human MOG peptide MOG14–36 is highly encephalitogenic in marmosets (presented by a common class II Caja-DRB*W1201 molecule) |
| Weissert et al. ( | 2001 | MOG91–114 immunization lead to clinical and histopathological EAE signs in LEW.1AV1 and LEW.1N rats |
| Bettelli et al. ( | 2003 | Development of spontaneous ON in T cell receptor (MOG35–55) transgenic C57BL/6 mice |
| Delarasse et al. ( | 2003 | MOG-deficient mice are resistant to rat MOG-induced EAE and developed a mild pathological phenotype after immunization of whole myelin. However, B- and T cell responses against the extracellular domain and peptides of MOG were not altered compared to wild-type mice, indicating MOG being resistant to the induction of immune tolerance |
| Sun et al. ( | 2003 | CD8+ MOG-specific T cells recognize H-2Db dimers coupled with encephalitogenic peptide MOG40–54 |
| Smith et al. ( | 2005 | Injection of full-length conformational MOG leads to chronic progressive EAE, but released MOG does not induce immunity during an ongoing disease in Biozzi ABH mice |
| Krishnamoorthy et al. ( | 2006 | MOG35–55 leads to paralytic EAE and ON in a double-transgenic (IgHMOG and TCRMOG) C57BL/6 line |
| de Graaf et al. ( | 2008 | In LEW.1N, LEW.1AV1, and dark agouti rats, MS-like pathology is mainly determined by presentation of MOG peptides on MHC class II molecules |
| Kap et al. ( | 2008 | Cytotoxic T cells specific to epitope MOG34–56 trigger fast progression of rhMOG-induced EAE in marmosets |
| Matsumoto et al. ( | 2009 | MOG91–108 is an encephalitogenic epitope able to induce mild T cell-mediated EAE but does not elicit Abs against the epitope or MOG in LEW.1AV1 rats |
| Pollinger et al. ( | 2009 | Development of relapsing-remitting EAE in TCR (MOG92–106) transgenic SJL/J mice |
| Bettini et al. ( | 2009 | CD8+ T cell dominant epitope MOG37–46 lead to mild form of EAE |
| York et al. ( | 2010 | MOG-specific CD8+ T cells are able to ameliorate CD4+ driven EAE |
| Anderson et al. ( | 2012 | CD4+ and CD8+ T cell driven EAE in transgenic MOG35–55 specific T cell mouse line (1C6) |
| de Graaf et al. ( | 2012 | Correct refolding of MOG increases its encephalogenicity by enhancing its processing or/and presentation on MHC molecules |
| Jagessar et al. ( | 2012 | MOG34–56 specific cytotoxic T cells are key regulators for gray and white matter demyelination in marmosets |
| Delarasse et al. ( | 2013 | Transmembrane regions MOG113–127 and MOG120–134 and second hydrophobic domain MOG183–197 are found to be immunogenic and pathogenic in C57BL/6 (H-2b) |
| Ortega et al. ( | 2013 | CD8+ cells reactive to MOG35–55 attenuate EAE severity in an adaptive CD4 T cell-mediated EAE model in C57BL/6 mice |
| Haanstra et al. ( | 2013 | rhMOG (1–125) induces EAE in non-human primates |
| Shetty et al. ( | 2014 | T cells directed to an encephalitogenic transmembrane domain (MOG110–132) induced clinical EAE, inflammation, and demyelination |
| Curtis et al. ( | 2014 | Injection of rat immunoglobuline variable of MOG together with incomplete Freud’s adjuvant lead to atypical EAE in LEW rats and Macaca species |
| Herrera et al. ( | 2014 | MOG35–55 induced EAE in C57BL/6 mice lead to lesions along the optic chiasm |
The role of B cells in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) animal models.
| Reference | Year | Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Hjelmstrom et al. ( | 1998 | B cell-independent demyelination in myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG)-induced EAE mice |
| Litzenburger et al. ( | 1998 | MOG-specific B cells accelerate and exacerbate EAE, but are not able to induce spontaneous disease or demyelination without induced EAE |
| Stefferl et al. ( | 1999 | Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) and MHC-linked effects can influence the antibody response and thereby disease severity in MOG-induced EAE |
| Lyons et al. ( | 1999 | B-cell-deficient mice immunized with MOG35–55 induced EAE but not mice immunized with recombinant full-length MOG |
| Forsthuber et al. ( | 2001 | MOG peptide 97–108 is the immunodominant human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DR4-restricted T cell epitope in transgenic mice and is presented by human B cells expressing HLA-DR4 (DRB1*0401) |
| Lyons et al. ( | 2002 | MOG-specific B cells and serum reconstitute the ability for inducing inflammatory EAE effects in B cell-deficient mice |
| Fillatreau et al. ( | 2002 | IL-10 production of B cells regulate type 1 immunity and play a key role in EAE recovery |
| Svensson et al. ( | 2002 | B cell-deficient mice with different genetic backgrounds (C57BL/10 and DBA/1) immunized with MOG1–125 showed decreased demyelination but inflammation was not affected |
| Bettelli et al. ( | 2006 | TCRMOG × IgHMOG mice develop severe EAE, with inflammatory lesions in the spinal cord and optic nerves |
| Pollinger et al. ( | 2009 | Transgenic mice expressing MOG92–106 specific T cells expand endogenous MOG-specific B cells, producing conformational, (epitope independent) Abs, and enhancing demyelinating EAE in a relapsing-remitting EAE model |
| Molnarfi et al. ( | 2013 | MOG-specific B cells play a critical role in the EAE pathogenesis due to its function as an antigen-presenting cells |
| Parker Harp et al. ( | 2015 | B cells directly interact with dendritic cells and enhance CD4 driven EAE severity in mice |
| Flach et al. ( | 2016 | MOG-specific B cells accelerate MOG T cell driven EAE inflammation and disease severity |
Studies reporting the presence of myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) antibodies (Abs) in patients with inflammatory demyelinating disorders in comparison to a control group of patients with other neurological disorders and/or healthy controls.
| Reference | Method | Patients | Multiple sclerosis | Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis | Aquaporin-4 (AQP4)− optic neuritis/transverse myelitis/neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders (NMOSD) | AQP4+ NMOSD | Controls |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lalive et al. ( | FACS | ad | 1/92 (1%) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | 1/37 (3%) |
| Zhou et al. ( | FACS | ad | 25/210 (12%) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | 8/187 (4%) |
| O’Connor et al. ( | RIA | ad, ped | 3/140 (2%) | 13/69 (19%) | n.a. | n.a. | 1/133 (1%) |
| Brilot et al. ( | FACS | ad, ped | 0/54 (0%) | 8/19 (42%) | n.a. | n.a | 0/73 (0%) |
| McLaughlin et al. ( | FACS | ad, ped | 39/385 (10%) | n.a. | n.a. | 0/13 (0%) | 6/214 (3%) |
| Selter et al. ( | FACS | ped | n.a. | 9/19 (47%) | n.a. | n.a. | 0/58 (0%) |
| Di Pauli et al. ( | IF-HT | ad, ped | 2/89 (2%) | 12/27 (44%) | n.a. | n.a. | 1/105 (1%) |
| Lalive et al. 2011 ( | FACS | ped | 1/22 (5%) | 3/11 (27%) | n.a. | n.a. | 0/20 (0%) |
| Mader et al. ( | IF-HT | ad, ped | 2/71 (3%) | 14/33 (42%) | 9/23 (39%) | 1/75 (1%) | 3/101 (3%) |
| Probstel et al. ( | FACS | ad, ped | 14/127 (11%) | 19/54 (35%) | n.a. | n.a. | 0/63 (0%) |
| Kitley et al. ( | IF | ad | 0/75 (0%) | n.a. | 4/27 (15%) | 0/44 (0%) | 0/23 (0%) |
| Rostasy et al. ( | IF-HT | ped | 1/11 (9%) | 13/29 (45%) | 7/29 (24%) | 0/2 (0%) | 0/23 (0%) |
| Dale et al. ( | FACS | ped | 7/15 (47%) | 11/24 (46%) | 13/24 (54%) | n.a. | 0/24 (0%) |
| Martinez-Hernandez et al. ( | IF-HT | ad | 0/64 (0%) | n.a. | 14/52 (27%) | 2/45 (4%) | 0/30 (0%) |
| Ramanathan et al. ( | FACS | ad | 1/76 (1%) | n.a. | 9/23 (39%) | n.a. | 0/52 (0%) |
| Elong Ngono et al. ( | IF-HT | ad | 1/16 (6%) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | 1/24 (4%) |
| Ketelslegers et al. ( | FACS | ped | n.a. | 10/24 (42%) | 4/29 (14%) | n.a. | 0/44 (0%) |
| Probstel et al. ( | FACS | ad | 0/48 (0%) | n.a. | 4/17 (24%) | 0/31 (0%) | 0/39 (0%) |
| Waters et al. ( | IF-IgG1 | ad | 0/76 (0%) | 7/16 (44%) | 40/63 (64%) | 0/130 (0%) | 0/13 (0%) |
| Fernandez-Carbonell et al. ( | FACS | ped | 4/45 (9%) | 3/7 (43%) | 4/14 (29%) | 0/2 (0%) | 0/23 (0%) |
| Jarius et al. ( | IF-HT | ad, ped | 0/139 (0%) | n.a. | 50/202 (25%) | 0/83 (0%) | 1/98 (1%) |
| Kim et al. ( | IF-IgG1 | ad | 0/29 (0%) | 1/6 (17%) | 15/163 (9%) | 0/49 (0%) | 0/72 (0%) |
| Spadaro et al. ( | FACS | ad | 5/181 (3%) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | 0/39 (0%) |
| van Pelt et al. ( | FACS | ad | n.a. | n.a. | 20/61 (33%) | 0/41 (0%) | 0/8 (0%) |
| Overall | 106/196 (5%) | 123/338 (36%) | 193/727 (27%) | 3/515 (1%) | 22/1527 (1%) |
The percentage of MOG Ab seropositivity was determined using the methods indicated in the table.
ad, adult; ped, pediatric; n.a., not analyzed; FACS, fluorescence-activated cell sorting; IF, immunofluorescence assay; IF-HT, immunofluorescence assay with high-titer cut-off; IF-IgG1, immunofluorescence assay for IgG1 Abs; RIA, radio immunoprecipitation assay.
Figure 1Studies reporting the presence of myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) antibodies (Abs) in patients with inflammatory demyelinating disorders (A) MS; (B) ADEM; (C) AQP4− ON/TM/NMOSD; (D) AQP4+ NMOSD (sensitivity, left side of each graph) in comparison to a control group of patients with other neurological disorders and/or healthy controls (specificity, right side of each graph). Sensitivities and specificities are indicated by symbols with error bars (95% confidence intervals). Specificities were calculated using the frequency of MOG Abs in other neurological disorders or healthy controls determined by the methods shown in Table 4. Sensitivities were calculated using the frequency of MOG Abs in inflammatory demyelinating disorders determined by the methods shown in Table 4.
Neuropathological findings in patients with myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) antibody (Ab)-associated demyelination.
| Reference | Number of cases | Sex, age (years) | Clinical presentation | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Konig et al. ( | 1 | F, 49 | RRMS | Multiple sclerosis (MS) pattern II; oligodendrocytes in lesion preserved (CNPase+; MOG not determined) |
| Spadaro et al. ( | 1 | F, 66 | Recurrent myelitis + brainstem involvement | MS pattern II; oligodendrocytes preserved (CNPase+; MOG−) |
| Di Pauli et al. ( | 1 | M, 71 | Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM)/acute MS | MOG and aquaporin-4 Ab positive; MS pattern II; oligodendrocytes preserved (CNPase+, MOG−) |
| Jarius et al. ( | 1 | F, 63 | CIS | MS pattern II; oligodendrocytes preserved (CNPase+, MOG+) |
| Wang et al. ( | 1 | F, 67 | Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders | Pattern classification not done; well-demarcated demyelinating lesion with preserved axons and astrocytes |
| Körtvélyessy et al. ( | 2 | M, 49 | ADEM | Intrathecal MOG Ab synthesis; MS pattern II; one patient with overlapping features of pattern III (early MAG loss, apoptotic oligodendrocytes in addition to complement deposition) |
| M, 34 |