| Literature DB >> 31557990 |
Carolin Hoffmann1, Shenghua Zong2, Marina Mané-Damas3, Peter Molenaar4, Mario Losen5, Pilar Martinez-Martinez6.
Abstract
Little is known about the etiology of neuropsychiatric disorders. The identification of autoantibodies targeting the N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor (NMDA-R), which causes neurological and psychiatric symptoms, has reinvigorated the hypothesis that other patient subgroups may also suffer from an underlying autoimmune condition. In recent years, a wide range of neuropsychiatric diseases and autoantibodies targeting ion-channels or neuronal receptors including NMDA-R, voltage gated potassium channel complex (VGKC complex), α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor (AMPA-R), γ-aminobutyric acid receptor (GABA-R) and dopamine receptor (DR) were studied and conflicting reports have been published regarding the seroprevalence of these autoantibodies. A clear causative role of autoantibodies on psychiatric symptoms has as yet only been shown for the NMDA-R. Several other autoantibodies have been related to the presence of certain symptoms and antibody effector mechanisms have been proposed. However, extensive clinical studies with large multicenter efforts to standardize diagnostic procedures for autoimmune etiology and animal studies are needed to confirm the pathogenicity of these autoantibodies. In this review, we discuss the current knowledge of neuronal autoantibodies in the major neuropsychiatric disorders: psychotic, major depression, autism spectrum, obsessive-compulsive and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorders.Entities:
Keywords: AMPA-R; DR; GABA-R; NMDA-R; VGKC complex; autoantibody; blood brain barrier; effector mechanisms; immunoglobulin; neuronal surface antigens; neuropsychiatric disorders
Year: 2016 PMID: 31557990 PMCID: PMC6698850 DOI: 10.3390/antib5020009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibodies (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4468
Description of the characteristics, prevalence and etiology of the mental disorders.
| Disorder | Characteristics | Prevalence | Etiology |
|---|---|---|---|
| Psychotic disorder | Delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech and behavior, and other symptoms. Social or occupational dysfunction. | Estimates of the prevalence vary greatly. The median European prevalence is ~5.3%, with interquartile range of 1.9%–14.4% [ | Environmental and genetic factors; about 80% of heritability [ |
| Major depressive disorder (MDD) | Feelings of persistent sadness and anhedonia that affect thoughts and behavior. Leading to physical problems. | Prevalence is up to 15% of the population. | Environmental and genetic factors; possibly autoantibody involvement [ |
| Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) | Social communication deficit, restricted interest, repetitive behaviors with high sensitivity to changes in environment. | Prevalence of 1.47% in 2010 [ | Environmental and genetic factors; ~90% heritability [ |
| Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) | Inattention, hyperactivity and impulsivity like excessive talking, fidgeting, or an inability to remain seated in appropriate situations. Incapability to focus and organize tasks and activities. | Most prevalent chronic neurodevelopmental disorder in school age children, affecting 2-18% [ | Strong genetic link as well as environmental factors [ |
| Obsessive-Compulsive disorder (OCD) | Anxiety, recurrent unwanted thoughts (obsessions) and repetitive behaviors (compulsions). | Affects 1%–3% of the worldwide population [ | Genetic and environmental factors [ |
Autoantibodies in neurologic diseases with psychiatric symptoms.
| Antigen Target | Subunit/Associated Protein | Related Disease | n+/n Patient | n+/n Control | Age Range * | Ig Type | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| VGKC complex | n.s. *** | Limbic encephalitis | 4/15 | n.t. *** | 47–69 | IgG | [ |
| NMDA-R | GluN1 | NMDA-R encephalitis with psychiatric symptoms | 50/485 | n.t | 17–44 | IgG | [ |
| 100/100 | n.t | 5–76 | IgG | [ | |||
| 250/250 | 0/100 | n/a | IgG | [ | |||
| 6/505 | n.t | 18–35 | IgG | [ | |||
| NMDA-R encephalitis (isolated psychiatric episodes) | 571/571 | n.t | 12–62 | IgG | [ | ||
| NMDA-R encephalitis (schizophrenia, and autism) | 1/1 | n.t | 9 | IgG | [ | ||
| Autoimmune encephalitis in postpartum psychosis | 2/96 | 0/64 | 25, 31 | IgG | [ | ||
| GluN2a/2b | Progressive cognitive dysfunction of unclear etiology | 7/24 | n.t | 49–81 | IgA | [ | |
| Herpes simplex encephalitis | 5/44 9/44 9/44 | n.t | 24–79 | IgG IgM IgA | [ | ||
| Limbic encephalitis, narcolepsy | 3/5, 3/5 | n.t | 18–59, 24–61 | IgG | [ | ||
| GluN1/GluN2a/2b | NMDA-R encephalitis associate with ovarian teratoma | 12/12 | 0/200 | 14–44 | IgG | [ | |
| AMPA-R | GluA1, GluA2 | Limbic encephalitis | 22/62 | n.t | 23–81 | n/a | [ |
| GABA-R | Type B | Encephalitis with opsoclonus, Ataxia, Chorea and Seizures | 1/1 | n.t | 3 | IgG | [ |
| α1/β3 subunits | Encephalitis with refractory seizures, status epilepticus, | 6/140 | 0/75 | n/a | IgG | [ | |
| α1/β3 subunits | Encephalitis with thymoma | 1/1 | n.t | 45 | IgG | [ | |
| GlyR | α1 | Progressive encephalomyelitis with rigidity and myoclonus (PERM) | 52/779 | n.t | 1–75 | IgG | [ |
| mGluR | mGluR5 | Encephalitis (Hodgkin lymphoma, Ophelia syndrome) | 2/2 | n.t | 15, 46 | IgG | [ |
| Kv4.2 | DPPX | Encephalitis (subacute onset of neuropsychiatric symptoms) | 4/4 | 0/210 | 45–76 | IgG | [ |
| D2DR | D2 | Basal ganglia encephalitis **, Sydenham’s chorea **, Tourette’s syndrome ** | 12/17, 10/30, 4/44 | 0/67 | 1–15, 2–17, 2–13 | IgG | [ |
| Folate receptor | - | Cerebral folate deficiency syndrome | 25/28 | 0/28 | 2.5–19.3 | n/a | [ |
| Rib-P | P1, P2, P3 | SLE with Depression | 22/100 | n.t | 23–36 | IgG | [ |
| GAD | n.s. | Non-paraneoplastic limbic encephalitis | 2/2 | n.t | 20,47 | IgG | [ |
* Age range of the positive subjects; ** Anti-basal ganglia antibodies (ABGA) can bind to either neuronal surface or intracellular antigens and are related to basal ganglia encephalitis, Sydenham’s chorea, Tourette’s syndrome, OCD and ADHD. For details see OCD and ADHD sections; *** n.s. = not specified; .n.t. = not tested; VGKC complex = voltage gated potassium channel complex; NMDA-R: N-Methyl-d-Asparte receptor; AMPA-R = α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor; GABA-R = γ-aminobutyric acid; GlyR = glycine receptor; mGluR= metabotropic glutamate receptor; Kv4.2 = Potassium channel, voltage dependent, Kv4.2; DPPX = Dipeptidyl-Peptidase-Like Protein-6; DRD2 = dopamine-2 receptor; Rib-P = ribosome P protein; SLE = Systemic lupus erythematosus; GAD = glutamic acid decarboxylase.
Autoantibodies related to psychiatric disorders.
| Antigen Target | Subunit/Associated Protein | Related Disorders (D) | n+/n Patient | n+/n Control | Ig Type | Age Range * | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| VGKC complex | LGI1, CASPR2 | Psychotic D | 3/125 | n/t *** | IgG | n/a *** | [ |
| n.s. *** | Psychotic D (schizophrenia) | 1/46 | n/t | IgG | 22 (pp) | [ | |
| NMDA-R | GluN1 | Psychotic D and major depressive D. (n.s.) | 81/1688 | 74/1703 | IgM | 26–56 (p) | [ |
| 92/1688 | 76/1703 | IgA | |||||
| 14/1688 | 20/1703 | IgG | |||||
| GluN2a/2b | Psychotic D (schizophrenia) | 4/51 | n/t | IgG | 26–53 (pp) | [ | |
| Psychotic D (schizophrenia) | 3/46 | n/t | IgG | 19–28 (pp) | [ | ||
| Muscarinic AChR | M1,M2 | Schizophrenia | (n/a)/21 | (n/a)/25 | IgG | 25–56 (p) | [ |
| Psychotic D, bipolar and depressive D | 42/122 | 0/52 | n/a | 24–63 (p) | [ | ||
| Nicotinic AChR | α7 | Schizophrenia | 5/21 | 0/17 | IgG | 46–61 (pp) | [ |
| D2DR | D2 | Bipolar and major depressive D | 6/122 | 0/52 | n/a | 30–63 (p) | [ |
| Opioid receptor | OPRM1 | Psychotic D, bipolar and major depressive D | 16/122 | 0/52 | n/a | 30–63 (p) | [ |
| Major depressive D | 2/27 | n/a | IgG | n/a | [ | ||
| 5HT receptor | HTR1A | Psychotic D, Major depressive D | 9/63 | 0/52 | n/a | 30–63 (p) | [ |
| Autism spectrum D (Autism) | n/a | n/a | n/a | <10 (pp) | [ | ||
| FR | - | Autism spectrum D (Autism) | 70/93 | n/t | n/a | 3–18 (t) | [ |
| DAT | - | Attention-deficit/hyperactivity | n/a/46 | n/a/15 | IgG | 4–16 (t) | [ |
| GAD | GAD 65 | Psychotic D (Schizophrenia) | 1/1 | n/t | n/a | 19 (pp) | [ |
| Autism spectrum D (Autism), Attention-deficit/hyperactivity D | 3/20, 4/15 | 0/14 | IgG | 8–11 (pp) | [ | ||
* Age range: (pp) the age range belongs to the patients tested positive in the assay, (p) the age range belongs to the total patients cohort tested in the assay, (t) the age range belongs to all the subjects (including controls and patients) tested in the assay; ** Anti-basal ganglia antibodies (ABGA) can bind to either neuronal surface or intracellular antigens and are related to OCD, ADHD. For details see paragraph on OCD and ADHD; *** n.s. = not specified; n/a = not available. n/t = not tested; VGKC complex = voltage gated potassium channel complex; Ig = immunoglobulin G; NMDA-R: N-Methyl-d-Asparte receptor; AChR = acetylcholine receptor; DRD2 = dopamine-2 receptor; OPRM1 = opioid receptor, mu 1; 5H = serotonin; HTR1A = 5-Hydroxytryptamine (Serotonin) Receptor 1A; FR = Folate receptor; DAT = Dopamine transporter; GAD= glutamic acid decarboxylase.
Evidence of autoantibody-mediated mechanisms in neuropsychiatric disorders.
| Disorders | Targets of the Autoantibodies | Prevalence * | Immunotherapy * | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NMDA | +/− | [ | + | [ | + | [ | + | [ | |
| VGKC complex | +/− | [ | + | [ | n/a ** | + | [ | ||
| AMPA-R | − | [ | + | [ | + | [ | n/a | ||
| D2DR | + | [ | + | [ | n/a | n/a | |||
| HTR-1A | + | [ | n/a | n/a | n/a | ||||
| mAChR | + | [ | + | [ | n/a | n/a | |||
| nAChR | + | [ | n/a | n/a | n/a | ||||
| GAD | +/− | [ | − | [ | n/a | + | [ | ||
| FR | + | [ | n/a | n/a | n/a | ||||
| OPRM1 | + | [ | n/a | n/a | n/a | ||||
| D2DR | + | [ | n/a | n/a | n/a | ||||
| HTR-1A | + | [ | n/a | n/a | n/a | ||||
| mAChR | + | [ | n/a | n/a | n/a | ||||
| NMDA-R | + | [ | + | [ | + | [ | n/a | ||
| Rib-p | n/a | + | [ | + | [ | n/a | |||
| HTR-1A | + | [ | n/a | n/a | n/a | ||||
| FR | + | [ | n/a | n/a | n/a | ||||
| GAD | + | [ | n/a | n/a | n/a | ||||
| Basal ganglia | +/− | [ | + | [ | + | [ | + | [ | |
| D2DR | n/a | + | [ | + | [ | n/a | |||
| Basal ganglia | +/− | [ | + | [ | n/a | n/a | |||
| GAD | +/− | [ | n/a | n/a | n/a | ||||
* All autoantibodies mentioned above have been reported in biological fluids in human subjects with neuropsychiatric disorders. Data shown here does not include autoimmune encephalitis. The pathological role of the autoantibodies has not been demonstrated for all cases; Coding is done as follows: Column for prevalence (Pre): Antibody is more frequent in the specific patients’ cohorts than in healthy individuals (+), not (−), or not available (n/a); in vitro: Autoantibody shows toxicity to cells in vitro or could change the antigen function (+), not (−), or not available (n/a); in vivo: Animal studies show the autoantibody could cause neuropsychiatric behavior (+), not (−), or not available (n/a); Immunotherapy: Patients would benefit from immunotherapy (+); if immunotherapy was not beneficial (−), if data not available (n/a); ** n/a = not available; NMDA-R = N-Methyl-d-Asparte receptor; VGKC complex = voltage gated potassium channel complex; AMPA-R = α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor; DRD2 = dopamine-2 receptor; HTR1A = 5-Hydroxytryptamine (Serotonin) Receptor 1A; AChR = acetylcholine receptor; GAD = glutamic acid decarboxylase; FR = Folate receptor; OPRM1= opioid receptor, mu 1.