| Literature DB >> 29280091 |
Scott S Zamvil1,2, Collin M Spencer3, Sergio E Baranzini3, Bruce A C Cree3.
Abstract
Neuromyelitis optica (NMO) is a rare, disabling, sometimes fatal central nervous system inflammatory demyelinating disease that is associated with antibodies ("NMO IgG") that target the water channel protein aquaporin-4 (AQP4) expressed on astrocytes. There is considerable interest in identifying environmental triggers that may elicit production of NMO IgG by AQP4-reactive B cells. Although NMO is considered principally a humoral autoimmune disease, antibodies of NMO IgG are IgG1, a T-cell-dependent immunoglobulin subclass, indicating that AQP4-reactive T cells have a pivotal role in NMO pathogenesis. When AQP4-specific proliferative T cells were first identified in patients with NMO it was discovered that T cells recognizing the dominant AQP4 T-cell epitope exhibited a T helper 17 (Th17) phenotype and displayed cross-reactivity to a homologous peptide sequence within a protein of Clostridium perfringens, a commensal bacterium found in human gut flora. The initial analysis of gut microbiota in NMO demonstrated that, in comparison to healthy controls (HC) and patients with multiple sclerosis, the microbiome of NMO is distinct. Remarkably, C. perfringens was the second most significantly enriched taxon in NMO, and among bacteria identified at the species level, C. perfringens was the one most highly associated with NMO. Those discoveries, along with evidence that certain Clostridia in the gut can regulate the balance between regulatory T cells and Th17 cells, indicate that gut microbiota, and possibly C. perfringens itself, could participate in NMO pathogenesis. Collectively, the evidence linking microbiota to humoral and cellular immunity in NMO underscores the importance for further investigating this relationship.Entities:
Keywords: AQP4; Microbiome; Molecular mimicry; Neuromyelitis optica; T cells
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29280091 PMCID: PMC5794705 DOI: 10.1007/s13311-017-0594-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurotherapeutics ISSN: 1878-7479 Impact factor: 7.620
Fig. 1CD4+ T cells from patients with neuromyelitis optica (NMO) recognize discrete aquaporin-4 (AQP4) epitopes. (A) Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from patients with NMO and healthy controls (HC) were labeled with 5,6-carboxyfluorescein diacetate succinimidyl ester (CFSE) and stimulated with AQP4 peptides. Proliferation of CD4+ T cells was measured by CFSE dilution. Cell division index (CDI) > 2 (broken lines) was considered positive. (B) Recall T-cell proliferation to individual AQP4 peptides was detected by [3H]-thymidine incorporation after initial stimulation with recombinant human AQP4. Adapted from Varrin-Doyer, et al., Ann Neurol 72:53-64 (2012). Reproduced with permission of John Wiley & Sons [31]
Fig. 2Differential abundance of bacterial taxa in neuromyelitis optica (NMO) and multiple sclerosis (MS) in comparison to healthy controls (HC). A total of 2621 organizational taxonomic units (OTUs) were detected in at least 1 stool sample. (A) Of these, 829 OTUs were differentially abundant between NMO and HC, whereas 277 OTUs were differentially abundant between MS and HC (uncorrected, p < 0.05). (B) After correction for multiple comparisons (the threshold for significance is p = 1.91 × 10-5), 42 OTUs remained differentially abundant for the NMO vs HC comparison, whereas no taxa remained associated with MS. Reproduced from Cree, et al., Ann Neurol 80:443-447 (2016), with permission of John Wiley & Sons [54]
Fig. 3Clostridium perfringens abundance was significantly increased in neuromyelitis optica (NMO). The abundance of gut C. perfringens was compared between NMO, multiple sclerosis (MS), and healthy controls (HC). Purple dots represent individual values for patients receiving rituximab. The y-axis represents the HybScore, a measure of relative abundance. Orange dots represent patients receiving treatment other than rituximab, or no treatment. Reproduced from Cree, et al., Ann Neurol 80:443-447 (2016), with permission of John Wiley & Sons [54]
Twelve most significant organizational taxonomic units (OTUs) that differentiate neuromyelitis optica (NMO) from healthy controls (HC)*
| Phylum | Class | Order | Family | Genus | Species |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fibrobacteres | Unclassified | Unclassified | Unclassified | Unclassified | Unclassified | 2.63 × 10-8 |
| Firmicutes | Clostridia | Clostridiales | Clostridiaceae |
|
| 5.24 × 10–8 |
| Tenericutes | Mollicutes | Acholeplasmatales | Acholeplasmataceae |
| Unclassified | 9.21 × 10–8 |
| Firmicutes | Clostridia | Clostridiales | Unclassified | Unclassified | Unclassified | 2.21 × 10–7 |
| Firmicutes | Clostridia | Clostridiales | Lachnospiraceae |
| Unclassified | 2.24 × 10–7 |
| Bacteroidetes | Bacteroidia | Bacteroidales | Unclassified | Unclassified | Unclassified | 2.68 × 10–7 |
| Firmicutes | Clostridia | Clostridiales | Lachnospiraceae |
|
| 3.95 × 10–7 |
| Bacteroidetes | Bacteroidia | Bacteroidales | Prevotellaceae |
| 97otu18529 | 4.71 x 10-7 |
| Firmicutes | Clostridia | Clostridiales | Unclassified | Unclassified | Unclassified | 6.31 × 10–7 |
| Proteobacteria | Alphaproteobacteria | Unclassified | Unclassified | Unclassified | Unclassified | 6.75 × 10–7 |
| Firmicutes | Clostridia | Clostridiales | Lachnospiraceae | Unclassified | Unclassified | 7.33 × 10–7 |
| Elusimicrobia | Elusimicrobia | FAC88 | 91otu12128 | 94otu9638 | 97otu81717 | 7.61 × 10–7 |
*OTUs that significantly differed in abundance between NMO and HC after adjusting for multiple comparisons (p < 1.91 × 10–5), ranked in order of decreasing statistical significance. Adapted from Cree, et al., Ann Neurol 80:443-447 (2016), with permission of John Wiley & Sons [54]
Fig. 4Model illustrating potential roles of Clostridium perfringens in neuromyelitis optica (NMO) pathogenesis. (Left) “Healthy microbiota”. Commensal bacteria, including Bacteroides fragilis and certain species within Clostridia clusters IV, XIVa, and XVIII, promote T-cell immune regulation [47, 49, 50]. Bacteria bind to M cells, which are concentrated in the terminal ileum and appendix in proximity to Peyer’s patches, a gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT), and are highly specialized to engulf microbial antigens and deliver them to antigen presenting cells (APCs) [55, 56], including dendritic cells (DC) and macrophages. APCs may also ingest bacterial antigens directly. The APCs, including regulatory CD103+ DC, produce anti-inflammatory cytokines (e.g., transforming growth factor-β) that promote expansion of antigen-specific regulatory T cells (Tregs). Those Tregs, along with T follicular helper cells (Tfh), a specialized subset of T cells that directs B-cell maturation, class-switch recombination, and differentiation into immunoglobulin-secreting plasma cells [18], promote production of bacteria-specific IgA [57, 58], which is the most abundant immunoglobulin subclass in the gastrointestinal tract. Individual IgA molecules enter gut epithelial cells and form IgA dimers, which are secreted (sIgA) into the intestinal lumen and mucus layer where they bind their specific bacterial targets. Bacteria-specific sIgA are known to alter microbiota composition and are thought to protect against inflammation and disease [57–59]. (Right) “NMO dysbiosis”. Overabundance of C. perfringens (CP) may elicit proinflammatory aquaporin-4 (AQP4)-specific T-cell and B-cell responses that contribute to development of NMO. CP binds to M cells or APC as described above. Processing of CP by APCs exposes a determinant of the ABC-TP (p204-217) that shares homology to AQP4 (p63-76), and when presented by APC, leads to activation and expansion of T cells that recognize either of these antigens (“molecular mimicry”) [31]. CP may expose products that promote secretion of the APC-derived proinflammatory Th17-polarizing cytokines (e.g., interleukin-6) that are increased in patients with NMO [31, 60, 61] leading to expansion of ABC-TP/AQP4-reactive T cells. Those Th17 cells, along with Tfh within GALT or in other secondary lymphoid tissues, promote AQP4-specific B cells to differentiate into plasma cells that secrete pathogenic AQP4-specific IgG1. In conjunction with other leukocytes (e.g., neutrophils and eosinophils), ABC-TP/AQP4-specific Th17 cells and AQP4-specific IgG target AQP4 in the central nervous system (CNS) causing inflammation of the optic nerves and spinal cord. Image courtesy of Xavier Studio