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- Title
Seroprevalence of autoantibodies against brain antigens in health and disease.
- Authors
Dahm, Liane; Ott, Christoph; Steiner, Johann; Stepniak, Beata; Teegen, Bianca; Saschenbrecker, Sandra; Hammer, Christian; Borowski, Kathrin; Begemann, Martin; Lemke, Sandra; Rentzsch, Kristin; Probst, Christian; Martens, Henrik; Wienands, Jürgen; Spalletta, Gianfranco; Weissenborn, Karin; Stöcker, Winfried; Ehrenreich, Hannelore
- Abstract
Objective We previously reported an unexpectedly high seroprevalence (∼10%) of N-methyl-D-aspartate-receptor subunit-NR1 (NMDAR1) autoantibodies (AB) in healthy and neuropsychiatrically ill subjects (N = 2,817). This finding challenges an unambiguous causal relationship of serum AB with brain disease. To test whether similar results would be obtained for other brain antigen-directed AB previously connected with pathological conditions, we systematically screened serum samples of 4,236 individuals. Methods Serum samples of healthy (n = 1,703) versus neuropsychiatrically ill subjects (schizophrenia, affective disorders, stroke, Parkinson disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, personality disorder; total n = 2,533) were tested. For analysis based on indirect immunofluorescence, we used biochip mosaics of frozen brain sections (rat, monkey) and transfected HEK293 cells expressing respective recombinant target antigens. Results Seroprevalence of all screened AB was comparable in healthy and ill individuals. None of them, however, reached the abundance of NMDAR1 AB (again ∼10%; immunoglobulin [Ig] G ∼1%). Appreciable frequency was noted for AB against amphiphysin (2.0%), ARHGAP26 (1.3%), CASPR2 (0.9%), MOG (0.8%), GAD65 (0.5%), Ma2 (0.5%), Yo (0.4%), and Ma1 (0.4%), with titers and Ig class distribution similar among groups. All other AB were found in ≤0.1% of individuals (anti-AMPAR-1/2, AQP4, CV2, Tr/DNER, DPPX-IF1, GABAR-B1/B2, GAD67, GLRA1b, GRM1, GRM5, Hu, LGl1, recoverin, Ri, ZIC4). The predominant Ig class depended on antigen location, with intracellular epitopes predisposing to IgG (chi-square = 218.91, p = 2.8 × 10−48). Interpretation To conclude, the brain antigen-directed AB tested here are comparably detectable in healthy subjects and the disease groups studied here, thus questioning an upfront pathological role of these serum AB. Ann Neurol 2014;76:82-94
- Publication
Annals of Neurology, 2014, Vol 76, Issue 1, p82
- ISSN
0364-5134
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/ana.24189