| Literature DB >> 32116982 |
Maria Pia Giannoccaro1,2, Sukhvir K Wright3,4, Angela Vincent2.
Abstract
Over the last two decades, the discovery of antibodies directed against neuronal surface antigens (NSA-Abs) in patients with different forms of encephalitis has provided a basis for immunotherapies in previously undefined disorders. Nevertheless, despite the circumstantial clinical evidence of the pathogenic role of these antibodies in classical autoimmune encephalitis, specific criteria need to be applied in order to establish the autoimmune nature of a disease. A growing number of studies have begun to provide proof of the pathogenicity of NSA-Abs and insights into their pathogenic mechanisms through passive transfer or, more rarely, through active immunization animal models. Moreover, the increasing evidence that NSA-Abs in the maternal circulation can reach the fetal brain parenchyma during gestation, causing long-term effects, has led to models of antibody-induced neurodevelopmental disorders. This review summarizes different methodological approaches and the results of the animal models of N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor (NMDAR), leucine-rich glioma-inactivated 1 (LGI1), contactin-associated protein 2 (CASPR2), and α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor (AMPAR) antibody-mediated disorders and discuss the results and the limitations. We also summarize recent experiments that demonstrate that maternal antibodies to NMDAR and CASPR2 can alter development in the offspring with potential lifelong susceptibility to neurological or psychiatric disorders.Entities:
Keywords: active immunization; animal models; maternal transfer; neuronal surface antibodies; passive transfer
Year: 2020 PMID: 32116982 PMCID: PMC7013005 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2019.01394
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1(A) Schematic representation of central excitatory and inhibitory synapses and main antibody targets. The proteins targeted by antibodies associated with autoimmune encephalitis are proteins expressed on the neuronal surface, often at both presynaptic and postsynaptic levels on inhibitory (GABAergic) and/or excitatory (glutamatergic) neurons in the central nervous system (CNS). (B) Schematic representation of CASPR2. CASPR2 localizes at the juxtaparanode of myelinated axons. CASPR2 binds to contactin-2/TAG-1 via its extracellular domain and links to PDZ-binding proteins and to the cytoskeleton via protein 4.1B, stabilizing Kv1 channels [adapted with permission from Giannoccaro et al. (2)].
Figure 2Main mechanisms by which antibodies act to reduce the function of their targets. Immunoglobulin G1 (IgG1) and IgG3 can cross-link antigenic targets, leading to internalization, and degradation of the antigen in lysosomes. Also, IgG1 and IgG3 can activate the complement cascade via their Fc domains, which interact with complement proteins C1 and C1q. The complement cascade culminates in the formation of the membrane attack complex which disrupts the phospholipid bilayer, resulting in cell damage. Finally, some autoantibodies can directly block receptors by binding to an essential transmitter or regulatory binding site, but monovalent IgG4 can only act by disrupting the function of the target or the interaction between their target and partner proteins.
Example of antibody-mediated diseases: clinical and experimental evidence for MG.
Clinical features (weakness and fatigue) can be reversed by plasma exchange and other immunotherapies ( IgG1 and IgG3 antibodies to the AChR are present in the majority of patients ( IgG and complement deposition are found at the neuromuscular junction ( The thymus gland contains germinal centers and produces some of the AChR antibodies ( Thymectomy leads to long-term clinical benefit, reducing the need for immunotherapies ( Mothers can transfer pathogenic antibodies to the fetus or neonate, causing a transient form of MG ( |
Genetic conditions caused by mutations in genes encoding AChRs cause similar clinical features but without evidence of autoimmunity. Genetic conditions can be modeled in transgenic mice [see ( |
Injection of patient IgG into mice or other species leads to short-term clinical or electrophysiological evidence of the disease ( Active immunization against purified AChRs leads to a more severe and prolonged model ( |
For a brief review of the history of research into myasthenia gravis, see Vincent (.
Summary of main features of NSAb diseases and the models.
| NMDAR encephalitis: psychiatric syndrome, seizures, amnesia, movement disorders catatonia, autonomic instability | EEG variable MRI often normal CSF cellular, intrathecal synthesis | Active | C57BL/6 mice (12 months old) WT and ApoE−/−; single injection of a mixture of GluN1 extracellular peptides and/or chicken ovalbumin + complete Freund's adjuvant | NMDAR1 peptides | Hyperactivity only after MK-801 in APOE−/− mice 4 weeks after immunization | No CD3 infiltrates, no microglia activation | NA | ( | |
| After 24-h incubation with serum from proteoliposome-treated mice, cultured hippocampal neurons showed reduced NMDAR-mediated currents and a decrease of >50% in GluN1 immunoreactivity | Active | C57BL/6 adult mice; subcutaneous injection of NMDARs in proteoliposomes (or liposomes or saline) followed by a booster 2 weeks later | Purified GluN1/GluN2B NMDA fully assembled tetrameric receptors (holoreceptors) embedded in liposomes | Hyperactivity, stereotypied, and anxiety-like behavior 4 weeks after immunization; overt seizures (21%), and hunched back/lethargy (11%) | Perivascular cuffing; patchy areas of cell death; microgliosis; immune cell infiltrates in the brain | Reduced NMDAR-mediated currents in cultured hippocampal neurons incubated with serum of immunized mice | ( | ||
| Internalization of NMDARs | PT | Male C57BL/6J mice (8–10 weeks old); icv infusion over 14 days | Pooled CSF | Cognitive and depressive-like | IgG bound, NMDAR loss | NA | ( | ||
| PT | icv, single bolus | Purified serum IgG | Increased seizure susceptibility | IgG, no NMDAR loss | Seizures after PTZ | ( | |||
| PT | Male | CSF from patients with NMDARE | Impaired spatial memory as detected with the Morris water maze test | Decreased content of NMDAR in the hippocampus; no neuronal loss or inflammatory cell infiltrates; increased CXCL10 expression in the brain | NA | ( | |||
| PT | Male C57BL/6J mice (8–10 weeks old); icv infusion over 14 days | CSF from patients with NMDARE with or without ephrin-B2 | Memory deficit and depressive-like behavior. | Decrease of the density of cell surface and synaptic NMDAR and EphB2 | Impairment of long-term synaptic plasticity | ( | |||
| PT | Male C57BL/6 mice (8–10 w old); ICV infusion over 14 days | CSF or IgGs purified from CSF of patients with NMDARE | Absence of overt changes in memory (NOR), anxiety, and locomotor activity (OF, RT). However, reduced preference for novel object at NOR | No neuronal loss; astrocytic hypertrophy but not proliferation in the hippocampus | Increased frequency of seizures; reduced excitability and membrane resistance of CA1 pyramidal neurons in mice hippocampal slices | ( | |||
| Patient-derived rhuMAb, specifically synaptic NMDAR clusters in cultured hippocampal neurons and NMDAR-mediated currents in NMDAR transfected cells | PT | Mice; icv infusion over 14 days | Recombinant human antibodies from clonally expanded intrathecal plasma cells | Memory impairment at NOR test | Human IgG bound; NMDAR loss in the hippocampus | NA | ( | ||
| mAb caused internalization of NMDAR | PT | Female Swiss Webster mice, 6–8 weeks old; single iv injection + LPS; 4 days' observation after 3 days' recovery | mAb from a patient with NMDARE | increased spontaneous locomotor activity | NA | NA | ( | ||
| PT | Female BALB/c mice (8–10 weeks old) | Intranasal inoculation of HSV-1 + ACV | NA | 4/6 mice developed serum NMDAR-Abs and showed decreased brain NMDAR expression | NA | ( | |||
| PT | Males Wistar rats; single stereotactic injection in the hippocampus (CA1) and premotor cortex | CSF or IgGs purified from CSF of patients with NMDARE | Increased glutamate | NA | NA | ( | |||
| PT | Female Wistar rats (2 months old); single stereotactic injection in the hippocampus (dentate gyrus) | CSF of patients with NMDARE or commercial anti-NMDAR1-Ab | Impaired memory at Morris water maze | NA | Reduced LTP in the dentate gyrus; absence of increased frequency of recurrent epileptiform discharges induced by gabazine compared with controls | ( | |||
| PT | Female Wistar rats (60–90 days old); single stereotactic injection in the hippocampus (CA3) | CSF of patients with NMDARE | NA | NA | Reduced LTP magnitude at A/C fiber-CA3 synapses compared with controls; increased frequency of epileptiform after potentials following the fEPSP | ( | |||
| PT | Female Wistar rats (8–10 weeks old); single stereotactic injection in the hippocampus (CA1) | CSF of patients with NMDARE | Absence of overt alteration at NOR, locomotor activity, and anxiety. However, reduced preference for NO at NOR | NA | Schaffer collateral–CA1 LTP reduced in hippocampal slices | ( | |||
| Peripheral (pain, neuromyotonia, autonomic dysfunction) | EMG evidence of peripheral nerve hyperexcitability | Loss of Kv1 expression on the surface of cultured DRG neurons incubated with CASPR2-IgG | PT | Male C57BL/6J mice (8–10 weeks old); ip daily injections for 14–18 days | Purified plasmapheresis IgG | Evidence of lowered thresholds for mechanical pain | IgG bound in DRG, small increase of microglia in spinal cord | Decreased Kv currents with increased excitability of DRG neurons | ( |
| Central: limbic encephalitis, Morvan's syndrome | MRI FLAIR hippocampal hyperintensity, CSF bland, little intrathecal synthesis | Some internalization of CASPR2 but no loss of surface CASPR2 | PT | Male C57BL/6J mice (8–10 weeks old); ip daily injections for 8 days + 1 ip LPS injection | Purified plasmapheresis IgG | Modest loss of working memory, abnormal behaviors in the presence of novel mouse | No loss of CASPR2 but extensive microglial activation and astrocyte activation with complement expression | NA | ( |
| CASPR2 internalization with reduction of CASPR2 surface expression and decreased intensity of surface GluA1 total and synaptic clusters | PT | C57BL/6J mice; single stereotactic injection; primary visual cortex (V1) | Purified IgG from PLEX | NA | NA | Reduced amplitude of AMPAR-mediated mEPSCs in V1-layer 2/3 pyramidal neurons incubated with patient IgG | ( | ||
| Central: LE with or without FBDS and or hyponatremia | MRI FLAIR hippocampal hyperintensity, usually normal CSF, rare OBs; Abs can be absent | Antibodies prevent the binding of LGI1 with ADAM22 and ADAM23 | PT | Male C57BL/6J mice (8–10 weeks old); icv infusion over 14 days | Purified IgG from serum | IgG bound; reduced Kv1.1 and AMPAR | Memory deficit at NOR | Increased presynaptic excitability and glutamatergic synaptic transmission and impaired LTP in acute hippocampal slices from LGI1-IgG-injected mice | ( |
| Central: LE | Lymphocytosis; OBs; Abs usually present | Internalization of AMPARs; depletion of heteromeric synaptic AMPARs containing GluA2 most likely followed by a synaptic incorporation of GluA1 homomeric AMPARs; decreased mEPSC amplitudes and frequency in neurons treated with a-GluA2 IgG | PT | C57BL/6 mice (WT and GluA1-KO); icv infusion over 14 days or single stereotactic intrahippocampal (CA1) injection | IgG purified from serum | Memory impairment at NOR and anxiety-like behavior (maximum effect after 18 days during pump infusion) | IgG bound to hippocampus; unchanged spine density and morphology; downregulation of GluA2 | Reduced mEPSC amplitudes and impairment of LTP in the SC- CA1 pathway in acute hippocampal slides | ( |
| Brain stem and spinal cord: PERM or SPS | Often no evident MRI or EEG findings. Pleocytosis in half of the cases, OBs (20%) | Cause internalization of GlyRs in transfected HEK cells. Inhibit GlyR function acutely | PT | ip daily injections of >10 mg/day for 11 days with 2 LPS injections | Purified plasmapheresis IgG | Modest motor phenotype with poor performance on rotarod and on narrow rods | IgG bound to brain stem and ventral horns IgG detected inside large brain stem neurons GlyRs persisted on surface of neurons | NA | ( |
Figure 3Epileptogenic effects of a single intracerebroventricular (icv) injection of N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor antibody (NMDAR-Ab)-positive immunoglobulin G (IgG). (A) The seizure score of mice injected with NMDAR-Ab IgG was higher than that of those injected with control IgG following exposure to a subthreshold dose of PTZ. (B) Diagram showing placement of subcutaneous wireless electroencephalogram (EEG) transmitter that allows continuous EEG recording in injected mice with no need for tethering (Open Source, Hashemi Instruments, USA). (C) A representative EEG of an NMDAR-Ab-injected mouse post-PTZ shows a number of “spikes” corresponding to convulsive seizures (upper trace), compared with the EEG of a healthy control IgG-injected mouse, which has minimal spike activity (lower trace). (D) When analyzed using the computer-based event detection program and blinded observer verification, the number of spikes seen in the hour following PTZ injection was greater in the NMDAR-Ab (n = 7) compared with the healthy control IgG (n = 6) injected mice (P = 0.023, Mann–Whitney). Results are mean ± SEM. (E) Human IgG injected in vivo was detected postmortem in NMDAR-Ab IgG-injected mice with antihuman IgG (green) merged with the nuclear stain 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) (blue). The typical pattern of NMDAR-Ab in the molecular cell layer with sparing of the granule cell layer was found (left image). Control IgG-injected mice had no detectable IgG (right image). (F) Bound human IgG in the hippocampi, as determined by the mean fluorescence intensity analysis of brain sections, was higher in the NMDAR-Ab IgG-injected mice than in healthy control IgG-injected mice in the CA1, CA3, and dentate gyrus (DG). (G) For the NMDAR-Ab animals (n = 5), there was a linear correlation between IgG binding and seizure score (R2 = 0.8; P = 0.04). The contents of this figure are taken from Wright et al. (39) with permission from Oxford University Press.
Figure 4Intraperitoneal (ip) injection of CASPR2 immunoglobulin G (IgG) with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) causes behavioral and neuropathological changes in mice. (A) Experimental design and selected behavioral tests. The behavioral tasks assessed locomotion (open field, OF), strength (inverted screen, IS), coordination (accelerating rotarod, AR; and narrow beam, NB), working memory (continuous spontaneous alternation, CSA), short- (forced alternation, FA) and long-term memory (novel object recognition, NOR—NORf, familiarization phase; NORt, test phase), anxiety (light-dark box, LDb), compulsive-like behavior (marble burying test, MB), social behavior (reciprocal social interaction tests, RSI), and olfaction (olfaction test, OT). (B) Continuous spontaneous alternations were reduced in CASPR2-IgG-injected mice compared with HC-IgG-injected mice (P = 0.044). In the RSI test, there was reduced latency to interact (P = 0.04; Mann–Whitney test) but no differences in the interaction time or number of interactions. However, in the non-social aspects of the test, there was increased time spent immobile (U = 0.008), reduced rearing (U = 0.02), and reduced grooming (U = 0.018). (C) Bound human IgG in the hippocampi and cerebellum of CASPR2- and HC-IgG-injected mice. CASPR2-IgG-injected animals had higher levels of IgG in the cortex (Cx) (P = 0.03), hippocampus (Hip) (P = 0.023), and thalamus (Th) (P = 0.0004) compared with HC-IgG-injected mice. No differences were observed in the levels of CASPR2 expression in the same areas (n = 4 per group). (D) c-Fos expression in the entorhinal–piriform cortex (P = 0.020), dorsomedial hypothalamus (DMH) (P = 0.037), and lateral hypothalamus (LH) (P = 0.031) was higher in the CASPR2-IgG-injected mice than in the HC-IgG-injected mice (n = 4 per group). (E) Representative images of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) staining in the molecular layer of the cerebellum and quantification of the mean fluorescence intensity in the same area showing higher GFAP expression in the CASPR2-IgG-injected mice (P = 0.043) (n = 4 per group; 40X, 10 μm). On the right, representative images of complement C3 expression on GFAP-positive cells. Percentage of C3/GFAP area ratio per cell showed increased C3 expression of astrocytes in CASPR2-IgG-injected mice. (F) Representative images of the z-stack projected IBA1 staining used for morphological analysis (40X, 10 μm). Quantification of morphological data in the hippocampus and molecular layer of the cerebellum showed that microglia from CASPR2-IgG-injected mice had a higher cell soma/cell total body size ratio [t(6) = 4.74, P = 0.0032] and shorter [t(6) = 3.68] ramifications than HC-IgG-injected mice, compatible with an activated phenotype in both the hippocampus (P = 0.017 and P = 0.010, respectively) and the cerebellum (P = 0.0003 and P = 0.008, respectively). ***The contents of this figure are taken from Giannoccaro et al. (51) with permission from Oxford University Press. * < 0.05, ** ≤ 0.01, *** ≤ 0.001.
Neurodevelopmental antigens and models.
| Acetylcholine receptor | Rare mothers with antibodies that inhibit fetal AChR, paralyze baby | Maternal plasma antibodies injected into dams during E13–18 of pregnancy. Proportion of offspring who died at birth or shortly after probably due to lack of respiration | Antibodies present in mouse offspring, offspring showed fixed joints mirroring changes in human babies | ( |
| CASPR2 | 4.9% of mothers with children diagnosed with range of motor and psychological disorders, not autism. HC 0.9% | IgG purified from plasmapheresis samples of two CASPR2-Ab-positive patients. Mice showed changes in cognition and impaired social interactions | Long-term neuropathological changes with activated microglia and glutamatergic synaptic loss | ( |
| CASPR2 | 37% of selected (brain reactive Abs) mothers of children with autism spectrum disorder; 12% of unselected women of childbearing age | MAb binding CASPR2 cloned from the mother of an autistic child. Mice showed impairments in sociability, flexible learning, and repetitive behaviors | Abnormal cortical development, decreased dendritic complexity of excitatory neurons, and reduced numbers of inhibitory neurons in the hippocampus | ( |
| NMDAR (NR1 subunit) | Marginal evidence for NMDAR antibodies in mothers of children with any psychiatric/neuropsychiatric disorders | mAbs from NMDAR-Ab-positive women. Mice showed early postnatal mortality (27.2%), altered blood pH, and impaired neurodevelopmental reflexes. | NMDAR was reduced (up to 49.2%), and electrophysiological properties were altered, reflected by decreased amplitudes of spontaneous excitatory postsynaptic currents in young neonates (−34.4%). Cerebellum, midbrain, brain stem volumes reduced | ( |