Abstract

To compare frequencies of autoreactive antibody responses to endogenous disease-associated antigens in healthy controls (HC), relapsing and progressive MS and to assess their associations with clinical and MRI measures of MS disease progression.MethodsThe study analyzed 969 serum samples from 315 HC, 411 relapsing remitting MS (RR-MS), 128 secondary progressive MS (SP-MS), 33 primary progressive MS (PP-MS) and 82 patients with other neurological diseases for autoantibodies against two putative MS antigens CSF114(Glc) and KIR4.1a and KIR4.1b and against 24 key endogenous antigens linked to diseases such as vasculitis, systemic sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, Sjogren’s syndrome, systemic lupus erythematosus, polymyositis, scleroderma, polymyositis, dermatomyositis, mixed connective tissue disease and primary biliary cirrhosis. Associations with disability and MRI measures of lesional injury and neurodegeneration were assessed.ResultsThe frequencies of anti-KIR4.1a and anti-KIR4.1b peptide IgG positivity were 9.8% and 11.4% in HC compared to 4.9% and 7.5% in RR-MS, 8.6% for both peptides in SP-MS and 6.1% for both peptides in PP-MS (p = 0.13 for KIR4.1a and p = 0.34 for KIR4.1b), respectively. Antibodies against CSF114(Glc), KIR4.1a and KIR4.1b peptides were not associated with MS compared to HC, or with MS disease progression. HLA DRB1*15:01 positivity and anti-Epstein Barr virus antibodies, which are MS risk factors, were not associated with these putative MS antibodies.ConclusionsAntibody responses to KIR4.1a and KIR4.1b peptides are not increased in MS compared to HC nor associated with MS disease progression. The frequencies of the diverse autoreactive antibodies investigated are similar in MS and HC.

Highlights

  • A role for humoral responses and B cells in multiple sclerosis (MS) pathogenesis has been suspected since the discovery of oligoclonal bands nearly 50 years ago [1]

  • Antibody responses to KIR4.1a and KIR4.1b peptides are not increased in MS compared to healthy controls (HC) nor associated with MS disease progression

  • The frequencies of the diverse autoreactive antibodies investigated are similar in MS and HC

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Summary

Introduction

A role for humoral responses and B cells in multiple sclerosis (MS) pathogenesis has been suspected since the discovery of oligoclonal bands nearly 50 years ago [1]. Autoreactive B cells can generate antigen specific autoantibodies in serum that have proven to be useful for diagnosing a range of autoimmune diseases and paraneoplastic neurological diseases. Neuromyelitis optica (NMO) is a demyelinating inflammatory CNS disease that has a predilection to affect the optic nerves and spinal cord and is included in the larger CNS inflammatory idiopathic demyelinating disease group [4]. It has a more severe outcome, involves B cell-mediated pathogenesis and importantly, it is associated with serum anti-aquaporin-4 antibodies (NMO IgG) [4]. The diagnostic value of antibodies against myelin proteins has not been conclusively proven and these tests have not found clinical acceptance [5, 6]

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