Abstract

SEE VAN DOORN AND JACOBS DOI101093/BRAIN/AWW078 FOR A SCIENTIFIC COMMENTARY ON THIS ARTICLE : In axonal forms of Guillain-Barré syndrome, anti-ganglioside antibodies bind gangliosides on nerve surfaces, thereby causing injury through complement activation and immune cell recruitment. Why some nerve regions are more vulnerable than others is unknown. One reason may be that neuronal membranes with high endocytic activity, including nerve terminals involved in neurotransmitter recycling, are able to endocytose anti-ganglioside antibodies from the cell surface so rapidly that antibody-mediated injury is attenuated. Herein we investigated whether endocytic clearance of anti-ganglioside antibodies by nerve terminals might also be of sufficient magnitude to deplete circulating antibody levels. Remarkably, systemically delivered anti-ganglioside antibody in mice was so avidly cleared from the circulation by endocytosis at ganglioside-expressing plasma membranes that it was rapidly rendered undetectable in serum. A major component of the clearance occurred at motor nerve terminals of neuromuscular junctions, from where anti-ganglioside antibody was retrogradely transported to the motor neuron cell body in the spinal cord, recycled to the plasma membrane, and secreted into the surrounding spinal cord. Uptake at the neuromuscular junction represents a major unexpected pathway by which pathogenic anti-ganglioside antibodies, and potentially other ganglioside binding proteins, are cleared from the systemic circulation and also covertly delivered to the central nervous system.

Highlights

  • The Guillain-Barresyndromes are autoimmune neuropathies in which immune factors acutely injure nerves

  • The neuromuscular junction (NMJ) is a major site of anti-ganglioside antibodies (AGAbs) binding but is relatively resistant to complement-mediated injury due to rapid internalization of antibody by endocytosis, compared with the endocytically inactive node of Ranvier, which is highly vulnerable to Received November 23, 2015

  • As ganglioside expression is widespread throughout the body, albeit enriched in the nervous system, many cell types are potentially responsible for antigen-specific AGAb clearance

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Summary

Introduction

The Guillain-Barresyndromes are autoimmune neuropathies in which immune factors acutely injure nerves (van den Berg et al, 2014). In axonal forms of Guillain-Barresyndrome, neurotoxic anti-ganglioside antibodies (AGAbs) bind to gangliosides on exposed axolemmal membranes where they fix complement (Plomp and Willison, 2009). The NMJ is a major site of AGAb binding but is relatively resistant to complement-mediated injury due to rapid internalization of antibody by endocytosis, compared with the endocytically inactive node of Ranvier, which is highly vulnerable to Received November 23, 2015.

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