Abstract
Gangliosides are a class of glycosphingolipid molecules that are highly enriched in cellular membranes of the nervous system. The gangliosides associated with autoimmune diseases of the nervous system are mainly GM1, GD1a, GalNAc-GD1a, GM1b, GD3, CD1b, GT1a, and GQ1b. Multiple antibodies recognizing gangliosides are associated with some acute or chronic peripheral neuropathies, especially Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) and its clinical variants. Antibodies binding to gangliosides can activate complement system and recruit macrophages on the axolemma at the nodes of Ranvier of motor fibers, which are found in the course of GBS, causing axonal degeneration and reversible conduction block or conduction failure. Testing of anti-gangliosides autoantibodies is helpful for diagnosis of autoimmune peripheral neuropathies or support the diagnosis of the subtypes. These anti-gangliosides antibodies are usually detected by several qualitative or quantitative methods, particularly enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and immunodot assays, which have been commercialized or established in-house worldwide. Herein, we introduce the methods and clinical applications of these assays in the diagnosis of autoimmune peripheral neuropathies. Anti-gangliosides antibodies are diagnostic markers of GBS subtypes. We use GBS as an example to explain the role of anti-gangliosides antibodies in the pathogenesis and diagnostic classification of neuropathies.
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