| Literature DB >> 32089545 |
Hong Pan1, Agnes A Steixner-Kumar1, Anna Seelbach1, Nadine Deutsch2, Anja Ronnenberg1, Daniel Tapken3, Nico von Ahsen4, Marina Mitjans1, Hans Worthmann2, Ralf Trippe3, Christina Klein-Schmidt3, Nadine Schopf1, Kristin Rentzsch5, Martin Begemann1,6, Jürgen Wienands7, Winfried Stöcker5, Karin Weissenborn2, Michael Hollmann3, Klaus-Armin Nave8, Fred Lühder9, Hannelore Ehrenreich10.
Abstract
Circulating autoantibodies (AB) of different immunoglobulin classes (IgM, IgA, and IgG), directed against the obligatory N-methyl-D-aspartate-receptor subunit NR1 (NMDAR1-AB), belong to the mammalian autoimmune repertoire, and appear with age-dependently high seroprevalence across health and disease. Upon access to the brain, they can exert NMDAR-antagonistic/ketamine-like actions. Still unanswered key questions, addressed here, are conditions of NMDAR1-AB formation/boosting, intraindividual persistence/course in serum over time, and (patho)physiological significance of NMDAR1-AB in modulating neuropsychiatric phenotypes. We demonstrate in a translational fashion from mouse to human that (1) serum NMDAR1-AB fluctuate upon long-term observation, independent of blood-brain barrier (BBB) perturbation; (2) a standardized small brain lesion in juvenile mice leads to increased NMDAR1-AB seroprevalence (IgM + IgG), together with enhanced Ig-class diversity; (3) CTLA4 (immune-checkpoint) genotypes, previously found associated with autoimmune disease, predispose to serum NMDAR1-AB in humans; (4) finally, pursuing our prior findings of an early increase in NMDAR1-AB seroprevalence in human migrants, which implicated chronic life stress as inducer, we independently replicate these results with prospectively recruited refugee minors. Most importantly, we here provide the first experimental evidence in mice of chronic life stress promoting serum NMDAR1-AB (IgA). Strikingly, stress-induced depressive-like behavior in mice and depression/anxiety in humans are reduced in NMDAR1-AB carriers with compromised BBB where NMDAR1-AB can readily reach the brain. To conclude, NMDAR1-AB may have a role as endogenous NMDAR antagonists, formed or boosted under various circumstances, ranging from genetic predisposition to, e.g., tumors, infection, brain injury, and stress, altogether increasing over lifetime, and exerting a spectrum of possible effects, also including beneficial functions.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32089545 PMCID: PMC8440197 DOI: 10.1038/s41380-020-0672-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Psychiatry ISSN: 1359-4184 Impact factor: 13.437
Fig. 1Fluctuation of NMDAR1-AB in mice and human upon longitudinal observation, independent of BBB perturbation.
a Intraindividual comparison of NMDAR1-AB seropositivity and Ig-class distribution in aged WT mice at two different time points. b Course of serum NMDAR1-AB in WT mice. c Intraindividual comparison of NMDAR1-AB seropositivity and Ig-class distribution in aged ApoE mice at two different time points. d Course of serum NMDAR1-AB in ApoE mice. e Intraindividual follow-up of NMDAR1-AB seropositivity in stroke patients at two different time points after stroke. f Course of serum NMDAR1-AB in stroke patients. a, c, e N numbers/percentage displayed in bars; McNemar’s test.
Fig. 3NMDAR1-AB are induced by chronic life stress and exert antidepressive effects in mice and human.
a Pilot experiment comparatively evaluating cFos expression in mouse brain as acute stress marker at 1 h after either moving within the mouse room, or moving to the rat room, or controls, staying without moving. Left: quantification of cFos + cells in the hippocampus and hypothalamus of C57BL/6N WT males, 4 weeks old, n = 4/group, 2–3 sections/mouse quantified; Jonckheere’s trend test; right: representative images of cFos staining in the hippocampus and hypothalamus under control versus transfer to rat room conditions. b Experimental outline for modeling of chronic life stress in mice. Young cohort: mouse environment: N = 23, 11 ApoE−− (eight males, three females), 12 WT (eight males, four females); rat environment: N = 24, 12 ApoE−− (eight males, four females), 12 WT (four males, eight females); old cohort: mouse environment: N = 24, 12 ApoE−− (six males, six females), 12 WT (three males, nine females); rat environment: N = 26, 13 ApoE−− (six males, seven females), 13 WT (three males, ten females). c NMDAR1-AB overall seroprevalence of WT is higher in mice housed in the rat compared with the mouse room (young cohort displayed; old cohort similar—not shown). d This increased seroprevalence in WT is due to NMDAR1-AB of the IgA class. e In contrast, ApoE−− mice lack the “organized pattern” seen in WT mice over time. N numbers given in the bars; generalized estimating equation, one sided. f NMDAR1-AB seroprevalence (IgM) is higher in prospectively recruited young migrants compared with age-matched controls of the GRAS data collection; N numbers given in the bars; Fisher’s exact test, two sided. g Left: higher depressive-like behavior of seronegative mice housed in rat as compared with mouse environment (both genotypes pooled); right: comparison of seropositive mice housed in rat environment reveals an antidepressive effect of NMDAR1-AB dependent on BBB function, i.e., in ApoE−− mice. N numbers given in the bars; unpaired t test, two sided. h Translation to humans using the GRAS data collection: NMDAR1-AB carriers with permeable BBB (APOE4+) are less depressed and anxious (BSI-scale scores) compared with controls; N numbers given in the bars; depression, unpaired t test, two sided; anxiety, Welch test, two sided.
Fig. 2Inducers/boosters of serum NMDAR1-AB.
a Experimental outline of the cryolesion experiment (cryolesion according to Sirén et al. [29]). b Higher Ig-class diversity of serum NMDAR1-AB at 4 months after cryolesion versus sham operation. c Increased percentage of serum NMDAR1-AB upon cryolesion is due to IgG and IgM. N numbers/percentage displayed in bars; chi-square test (IgA, IgM, and IgG + IgM) or Fisher’s exact test (IgG), two sided. d Human CTLA4 SNPs predispose to serum NMDAR1-AB (IgA + IgG) as seen in both allelic and genotypic analyses (minor variation in N numbers due to missing information). e Experimental outline of CTLA4-AB treatment of mice. f CTLA4-AB validation by flow cytometry on cells from murine lymph nodes (FACS): left, control staining (without CTLA4-AB), right, CTLA4-AB staining; cells pre-gated on CD4+. g Representative images of FoxP3 ± CTLA4-AB staining of murine spleen cells, demonstrating specific double labeling of regulatory T-cells. h Intraindividual follow-up of NMDAR1-AB seropositivity upon CTLA4-AB versus isotype-control IgG treatment. N numbers displayed in bars; Cochran–Armitage test for trend or chi-square test, two sided.