Halstead Susan K, Zitman Femke M P, Humphreys Peter D, Greenshields Kay, Verschuuren Jan J, Jacobs Bart C, Rother Russell P, Plomp Jaap J, Willison Hugh J
University of Glasgow, Division of Clinical Neurosciences, Glasgow Biomedical Research Centre, Glasgow, UK.
Brain. 2008 May;131(Pt 5):1197-208. doi: 10.1093/brain/awm316. Epub 2008 Jan 8.
Anti-GQ1b ganglioside antibodies are the serological hallmark of the Miller Fisher syndrome (MFS) variant of the paralytic neuropathy, Guillain-Barré syndrome, and are believed to be the principal pathogenic mediators of the disease. In support of this, we previously showed in an in vitro mouse model of MFS that anti-GQ1b antibodies were able to bind and disrupt presynaptic motor nerve terminals at the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) as one of their target sites, thereby causing muscle paralysis. This injury only occurred through activation of complement, culminating in the formation and deposition of membrane attack complex (MAC, C5b-9) in nerve membranes. Since this step is crucial to the neuropathic process and an important convergence point for antibody and complement mediated membrane injury in general, it forms an attractive pharmacotherapeutic target. Here, we assessed the efficacy of the humanized monoclonal antibody eculizumab, which blocks the formation of human C5a and C5b-9, in preventing the immune-mediated motor neuropathy exemplified in this model. Eculizumab completely prevented electrophysiological and structural lesions at anti-GQ1b antibody pre-incubated NMJs in vitro when using normal human serum (NHS) as a complement source. In a novel in vivo mouse model of MFS generated through intraperitoneal injection of anti-GQ1b antibody and NHS, mice developed respiratory paralysis due to transmission block at diaphragm NMJs, resulting from anti-GQ1b antibody binding and complement activation. Intravenous injection of eculizumab effectively prevented respiratory paralysis and associated functional and morphological hallmarks of terminal motor neuropathy. We show that eculizumab protects against complement-mediated damage in murine MFS, providing the rationale for undertaking clinical trials in this disease and other antibody-mediated neuropathies in which complement activation is believed to be involved.
抗GQ1b神经节苷脂抗体是麻痹性神经病格林-巴利综合征(Guillain-Barré syndrome)的米勒-费雪综合征(Miller Fisher syndrome,MFS)变异型的血清学标志,被认为是该疾病的主要致病介质。为此,我们之前在MFS的体外小鼠模型中发现,抗GQ1b抗体能够结合并破坏神经肌肉接头(NMJ)处的突触前运动神经末梢,将其作为靶点之一,从而导致肌肉麻痹。这种损伤仅通过补体激活发生,最终在神经膜中形成并沉积膜攻击复合物(MAC,C5b-9)。由于这一步骤对神经病变过程至关重要,且通常是抗体和补体介导的膜损伤的重要汇聚点,因此它成为一个有吸引力的药物治疗靶点。在此,我们评估了可阻断人C5a和C5b-9形成的人源化单克隆抗体依库珠单抗在预防该模型中所体现的免疫介导性运动神经病方面的疗效。当使用正常人血清(NHS)作为补体来源时,依库珠单抗在体外可完全预防抗GQ1b抗体预孵育的NMJ处的电生理和结构损伤。在通过腹腔注射抗GQ1b抗体和NHS建立的新型MFS体内小鼠模型中,小鼠因膈肌NMJ处的传递阻滞而出现呼吸麻痹,这是由抗GQ1b抗体结合和补体激活所致。静脉注射依库珠单抗可有效预防呼吸麻痹以及终末运动神经病相关的功能和形态学特征。我们发现依库珠单抗可保护小鼠MFS免受补体介导的损伤,为在该疾病以及其他认为涉及补体激活的抗体介导性神经病中开展临床试验提供了理论依据。