Functional Consequences of Neuromyelitis Optica-IgG Astrocyte Interactions on Blood-Brain Barrier Permeability and Granulocyte Recruitment
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Vincent, Thierry
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Functional Consequences of Neuromyelitis Optica-IgG Astrocyte Interactions on Blood-Brain Barrier Permeability and Granulocyte Recruitment
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Abstract
Autoantibody neuromyelitis optica-IgG (NMO-IgG) recognizing aquaporin-4 (AQP4) is implicated as playing a central role in the
physiopathology of NMO. The aim of this in vitro-based study was to characterize functional consequences of interaction between
NMO-IgG and cells of the neurovascular unit (astrocytes and brain endothelium) that would provide insight into recognized
features of NMO, namely altered blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability and granulocyte recruitment. We used sera from NMO
and longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis cases shown to bind in a characteristic perivascular pattern to primate cerebellar
slices. Using flow cytometry, we found that sera from NMO-IgG-positive patients reacted with CNS-derived human fetal astrocytes,
whereas sera from multiple sclerosis patients did not. We demonstrated that NMO-IgG binding to astrocytes alters aquaporin-
4 polarized expression and increases permeability of a human BBB endothelium/astrocyte barrier. We further demonstrated
that NMO-IgG binding to human fetal astrocytes can result in NK cell degranulation, astrocyte killing by Ab-dependent cellular
cytotoxicity and complement-dependent granulocyte attraction through the BBB model. Our study highlights important functional
roles for NMO-IgG that could account for pathological lesions and BBB dysfunction observed in NMO.
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The Journal of Immunology, 181: 5730–5737, 2008
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