Weber Martin S, Hemmer Bernhard, Cepok Sabine
Department of Neurology, Technische Universität Müchen, Munich, Germany.
Biochim Biophys Acta. 2011 Feb;1812(2):239-45. doi: 10.1016/j.bbadis.2010.06.009. Epub 2010 Jun 25.
B cells, plasma cells, and antibodies are commonly found in active central nervous system (CNS) lesions in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). B cells isolated from CNS lesions as well as from the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) show signs of clonal expansion and hypermutation, suggesting their local activation. Plasma blasts and plasma cells maturating from these B cells were recently identified to contribute to the development of oligoclonal antibodies produced within the CSF, which remain a diagnostic hallmark finding in MS. Within the CNS, antibody deposition is associated with complement activation and demyelination, indicating antigen recognition-associated effector function. While some studies indeed implied a disease-intrinsic and possibly pathogenic role of antibodies directed against components of the myelin sheath, no unequivocal results on a decisive target antigen within the CNS persisted to date. The notion of a pathogenic role for antibodies in MS is nevertheless empirically supported by the clinical benefit of plasma exchange in patients with histologic signs of antibody deposition within the CNS. Further, such evidence derives from the animal model of MS, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). In transgenic mice endogenously producing myelin-specific antibodies, EAE severity was substantially increased accompanied by enhanced CNS demyelination. Further, genetic engineering in mice adding T cells that recognize the same myelin antigen resulted in spontaneous EAE development, indicating that the coexistence of myelin-specific B cells, T cells, and antibodies was sufficient to trigger CNS autoimmune disease. In conclusion, various pathological, clinical, immunological, and experimental findings collectively indicate a pathogenic role of antibodies in MS, whereas several conceptual challenges, above all uncovering potential target antigens of the antibody response within the CNS, remain to be overcome.
在多发性硬化症(MS)患者的活动性中枢神经系统(CNS)病变中,常见B细胞、浆细胞和抗体。从CNS病变以及脑脊液(CSF)中分离出的B细胞显示出克隆扩增和超突变的迹象,表明它们在局部被激活。最近发现,从这些B细胞成熟而来的浆母细胞和浆细胞有助于CSF中产生寡克隆抗体,而寡克隆抗体仍是MS诊断的标志性发现。在CNS内,抗体沉积与补体激活和脱髓鞘有关,表明存在抗原识别相关的效应功能。虽然一些研究确实暗示了针对髓鞘成分的抗体具有疾病内在的、可能的致病作用,但迄今为止,关于CNS内决定性靶抗原的明确结果仍未确定。然而,血浆置换对有CNS内抗体沉积组织学迹象的患者具有临床益处,这从经验上支持了抗体在MS中具有致病作用的观点。此外,此类证据还来自MS的动物模型——实验性自身免疫性脑脊髓炎(EAE)。在体内产生髓鞘特异性抗体的转基因小鼠中,EAE的严重程度显著增加,同时CNS脱髓鞘加重。此外,在小鼠中进行基因工程,添加识别相同髓鞘抗原的T细胞,导致EAE自发发展,这表明髓鞘特异性B细胞、T细胞和抗体共存足以引发CNS自身免疫性疾病。总之,各种病理、临床、免疫学和实验结果共同表明抗体在MS中具有致病作用,然而,仍有几个概念上的挑战有待克服,首要的是揭示CNS内抗体反应的潜在靶抗原。