@article{RauschenbergerPiroKasaragodetal.2023, author = {Rauschenberger, Vera and Piro, Inken and Kasaragod, Vikram Babu and H{\"o}rlin, Verena and Eckes, Anna-Lena and Kluck, Christoph J. and Schindelin, Hermann and Meinck, Hans-Michael and Wickel, Jonathan and Geis, Christian and T{\"u}z{\"u}n, Erdem and Doppler, Kathrin and Sommer, Claudia and Villmann, Carmen}, title = {Glycine receptor autoantibody binding to the extracellular domain is independent from receptor glycosylation}, series = {Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience}, volume = {16}, journal = {Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience}, doi = {10.3389/fnmol.2023.1089101}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-304206}, year = {2023}, abstract = {Glycine receptor (GlyR) autoantibodies are associated with stiff-person syndrome and the life-threatening progressive encephalomyelitis with rigidity and myoclonus in children and adults. Patient histories show variability in symptoms and responses to therapeutic treatments. A better understanding of the autoantibody pathology is required to develop improved therapeutic strategies. So far, the underlying molecular pathomechanisms include enhanced receptor internalization and direct receptor blocking altering GlyR function. A common epitope of autoantibodies against the GlyRα1 has been previously defined to residues 1A-33G at the N-terminus of the mature GlyR extracellular domain. However, if other autoantibody binding sites exist or additional GlyR residues are involved in autoantibody binding is yet unknown. The present study investigates the importance of receptor glycosylation for binding of anti-GlyR autoantibodies. The glycine receptor α1 harbors only one glycosylation site at the amino acid residue asparagine 38 localized in close vicinity to the identified common autoantibody epitope. First, non-glycosylated GlyRs were characterized using protein biochemical approaches as well as electrophysiological recordings and molecular modeling. Molecular modeling of non-glycosylated GlyRα1 did not show major structural alterations. Moreover, non-glycosylation of the GlyRα1N38Q did not prevent the receptor from surface expression. At the functional level, the non-glycosylated GlyR demonstrated reduced glycine potency, but patient GlyR autoantibodies still bound to the surface-expressed non-glycosylated receptor protein in living cells. Efficient adsorption of GlyR autoantibodies from patient samples was possible by binding to native glycosylated and non-glycosylated GlyRα1 expressed in living not fixed transfected HEK293 cells. Binding of patient-derived GlyR autoantibodies to the non-glycosylated GlyRα1 offered the possibility to use purified non-glycosylated GlyR extracellular domain constructs coated on ELISA plates and use them as a fast screening readout for the presence of GlyR autoantibodies in patient serum samples. Following successful adsorption of patient autoantibodies by GlyR ECDs, binding to primary motoneurons and transfected cells was absent. Our results indicate that the glycine receptor autoantibody binding is independent of the receptor's glycosylation state. Purified non-glycosylated receptor domains harbouring the autoantibody epitope thus provide, an additional reliable experimental tool besides binding to native receptors in cell-based assays for detection of autoantibody presence in patient sera.}, language = {en} } @article{GeisWeishauptGruenewaldetal.2011, author = {Geis, Christian and Weishaupt, Andreas and Gr{\"u}newald, Benedikt and Wultsch, Thomas and Reif, Andreas and Gerlach, Manfred and Dirkx, Ron and Solimena, Michele and Toyka, Klaus V and Folli, Franco and Perani, Daniela and Heckmann, Manfred and Sommer, Claudia}, title = {Human Stiff-Person Syndrome IgG Induces Anxious Behavior in Rats}, series = {Plos One}, volume = {6}, journal = {Plos One}, number = {2}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0016775}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-140506}, pages = {e16775}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Background: Anxiety is a heterogeneous behavioral domain playing a role in a variety of neuropsychiatric diseases. While anxiety is the cardinal symptom in disorders such as panic disorder, co-morbid anxious behavior can occur in a variety of diseases. Stiff person syndrome (SPS) is a CNS disorder characterized by increased muscle tone and prominent agoraphobia and anxiety. Most patients have high-titer antibodies against glutamate decarboxylase (GAD) 65. The pathogenic role of these autoantibodies is unclear. Methodology/Principal Findings: We re-investigated a 53 year old woman with SPS and profound anxiety for GABA-A receptor binding in the amygdala with (11) C-flumazenil PET scan and studied the potential pathogenic role of purified IgG from her plasma filtrates containing high-titer antibodies against GAD 65. We passively transferred the IgG fraction intrathecally into rats and analyzed the effects using behavioral and in vivo electrophysiological methods. In cell culture, we measured the effect of patient IgG on GABA release from hippocampal neurons. Repetitive intrathecal application of purified patient IgG in rats resulted in an anxious phenotype resembling the core symptoms of the patient. Patient IgG selectively bound to rat amygdala, hippocampus, and frontal cortical areas. In cultured rat hippocampal neurons, patient IgG inhibited GABA release. In line with these experimental results, the GABA-A receptor binding potential was reduced in the patient's amygdala/hippocampus complex. No motor abnormalities were found in recipient rats. Conclusion/Significance: The observations in rats after passive transfer lead us to propose that anxiety-like behavior can be induced in rats by passive transfer of IgG from a SPS patient positive for anti-GAD 65 antibodies. Anxiety, in this case, thus may be an antibody-mediated phenomenon with consecutive disturbance of GABAergic signaling in the amygdala region.}, language = {en} }