4.7 Article

Functional changes in neuronal circuits due to antibody-driven autoimmune response

Journal

NEUROBIOLOGY OF DISEASE
Volume 184, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.nbd.2023.106221

Keywords

Autoimmune encephalitis; Limbic encephalitis; Excitability; Synaptic plasticity; Network effects; NMDA; LGI1; CASPR2; Kv1; 2; GAD65; Electrophysiology; Synaptic mechanisms

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Autoimmune-mediated encephalitis syndromes are important clinical entities that can present with various neurological symptoms. Antibody identification and early diagnosis are crucial to prevent brain tissue damage. This review focuses on the current understanding of antibody interaction mechanisms in the central nervous system and discusses the challenges in explaining hyperexcitability, seizures, and cognitive dysfunction.
Autoimmune-mediated encephalitis syndromes are increasingly being recognized as important clinical entities. They need to be thought of as differential diagnosis in any patient presenting with fast-onset psychosis or psychiatric problems, memory deficits or other cognitive problems, including aphasias, as well as seizures or motor automatisms, but also rigidity, paresis, ataxia or dystonic / parkinsonian symptoms. Diagnosis including imaging and CSF search for antibodies needs to be fast, as progression of these inflammatory processes is often causing scarring of brain tissue, with hypergliosis and atrophy. As these symptoms show, the autoantibodies present in these cases appear to act within the CNS. Several of such antibodies have by now been identified such as IgG directed against NMDA-receptors, AMPA receptors, GABAA and GABAB receptors, and voltage gated potassium channels and proteins of the potassium channel complex (i.e. LGI1 and CASPR2). These are neuropil / surface antigens where antibody interaction can well be envisaged to cause dysfunction of the target protein, including internalization. Others, such as antibodies directed against GAD65 (an intracellular enzyme responsible for GABA-synthesis from glutamate), are discussed to constitute epiphenomena, but not causal agents in disease progression. This review will focus on the current knowledge of antibody interaction mechanisms, especially discussing cellular excitability changes and synaptic interactions in hippocampal and other brain networks. One challenge in this context is to find viable hypotheses for the emergence of both, hyperexcitability and seizures, and presumably reduced synaptic plasticity and underlying cognitive dysfunction.

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