Antibodies produced by clonally expanded plasma cells in multiple sclerosis cerebrospinal fluid cause demyelination of spinal cord explants

K Blauth, J Soltys, A Matschulat, CR Reiter… - Acta …, 2015 - Springer
K Blauth, J Soltys, A Matschulat, CR Reiter, A Ritchie, NL Baird, JL Bennett, GP Owens
Acta neuropathologica, 2015Springer
B cells are implicated in the etiology of multiple sclerosis (MS). Intrathecal IgG synthesis,
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) oligoclonal bands and lesional IgG deposition suggest a role for
antibody-mediated pathology. We examined the binding of IgG1 monoclonal recombinant
antibodies (rAbs) derived from MS patient CSF expanded B cell clones to central nervous
system (CNS) tissue. MS rAbs displaying CNS binding to mouse and human CNS tissue
were further tested for their ability to induce complement-mediated tissue injury in ex vivo …
Abstract
B cells are implicated in the etiology of multiple sclerosis (MS). Intrathecal IgG synthesis, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) oligoclonal bands and lesional IgG deposition suggest a role for antibody-mediated pathology. We examined the binding of IgG1 monoclonal recombinant antibodies (rAbs) derived from MS patient CSF expanded B cell clones to central nervous system (CNS) tissue. MS rAbs displaying CNS binding to mouse and human CNS tissue were further tested for their ability to induce complement-mediated tissue injury in ex vivo spinal cord explant cultures. The staining of CNS tissue, primary human astrocytes and human neurons revealed a measurable bias in MS rAb binding to antigens preferentially expressed on astrocytes and neurons. MS rAbs that recognize myelin-enriched antigens were rarely detected. Both myelin-specific and some astrocyte/neuronal-specific MS rAbs caused significant myelin loss and astrocyte activation when applied to spinal cord explant cultures in the presence of complement. Overall, the intrathecal B cell response in multiple sclerosis binds to both glial and neuronal targets and produces demyelination in spinal cord explant cultures implicating intrathecal IgG in MS pathogenesis.
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