Abstract

An intrathecal synthesis of IgA has been reported in various neurological disorders. However, the frequency of its occurence and the electrophoretic characteristics of the locally produced IgA remained a matter of controversy. We developed a sensitive immunoaffinity-mediated capillary blot technique for the detection of polyclonal and oligoclonal IgA in the CSF of 115 patients with various neurological disorders. Paired CSF and serum samples containing 50 ng IgA after appropriate dilutions were submitted to isoelectric focusing in agarose gels; IgA was then blotted onto a polyvinylidene difluoride sheet coated by an anti-IgA antiserum or by infectious antigens. The immunoblots were revealed by an alkaline phosphatase-conjugated anti-IgA antiserum. Only five samples displayed CSF-restricted oligoclonal IgA bands, including two out of 33 from MS patients. In herpetic encephalitis ( n = 5) and varicella-zoster meningitis ( n = 2), a strong intrathecal production of virus-specific IgA antibodies was detectable. In such cases, faint oligoclonal IgA antibodies were superimposed on a polyclonal background. A weak local production of anti- Borrelia burgdorferi IgA antibodies was present in two out of four cases of neuroborreliosis.

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