4.7 Article

Delayed administration of elezanumab, a human anti-RGMa neutralizing monoclonal antibody, promotes recovery following cervical spinal cord injury

Journal

NEUROBIOLOGY OF DISEASE
Volume 172, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.nbd.2022.105812

Keywords

RGMa; Monoclonal antibody; Elezanumab; Cervical spinal cord injury; Axonal sprouting; Regeneration; Neuroplasticity; Neuroprotection; Functional recovery; Cervical locomotor score

Categories

Funding

  1. Wings for Life Spinal Cord Research Foundation
  2. Morton Cure Paralysis Fund
  3. Paralyzed Veterans of America
  4. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  5. Krembil Foundation
  6. Spinal Cord Injury Ontario
  7. AbbVie
  8. Jericho Foundation
  9. Toronto General and Western Hospital Foundation

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RGMa plays an important role in spinal cord injury, and delayed administration of elezanumab promotes neuroprotection and regeneration, with efficacy demonstrated in a cervical SCI model. Elezanumab facilitates recovery of motor and fine motor function, and improves specific gait parameters.
Spinal cord injury (SCI) elicits a cascade of degenerative events including cell death, axonal degeneration, and the upregulation of inhibitory molecules which limit repair. Repulsive guidance molecule A (RGMa) is an axon growth inhibitor which is also involved in neuronal cell death and differentiation. SCI causes upregulation of RGMa in the injured rodent, non-human primate, and human spinal cord. Recently, we showed that delayed administration of elezanumab, a high affinity human RGMa-specific monoclonal antibody, promoted neuroprotective and regenerative effects following thoracic SCI. Since most human traumatic SCI is at the cervical level, and level-dependent anatomical and molecular differences may influence pathophysiological responses to injury and treatment, we examined the efficacy of elezanumab and its therapeutic time window of administration in a clinically relevant rat model of cervical impact-compression SCI. Pharmacokinetic analysis of plasma and spinal cord tissue lysate showed comparable levels of RGMa antibodies with delayed administration following cervical SCI. At 12w after SCI, elezanumab promoted long term benefits including perilesional sparing of motoneurons and increased neuroplasticity of key descending pathways involved in locomotion and fine motor function. Elezanumab also promoted growth of corticospinal axons into spinal cord gray matter and enhanced serotonergic innervation of the ventral horn to form synaptic connections caudal to the cervical lesion. Significant recovery in grip and trunk/core strength, locomotion and gait, and spontaneous voiding ability was found in rats treated with elezanumab either immediately post-injury or at 3 h post-SCI, and improvements in specific gait parameters were found when elezanumab was delayed to 24 h post-injury. We also developed a new locomotor score, the Cervical Locomotor Score, a simple and sensitive measure of trunk/core and limb strength and stability during dynamic locomotion.

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