AUTOIMMUNITY AND NEUROLOGICAL DISEASE: Antibody Modulation of Synaptic Transmission
- 1 March 1999
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Neuroscience
- Vol. 22 (1) , 175-195
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.neuro.22.1.175
Abstract
▪ Abstract Over the past three decades, compelling evidence has emerged that the immune system can attack the nervous system with devastating consequences for human health. Either cell-mediated or humoral (antibody-mediated) autoimmune mechanisms may predominate in effecting a given disease, and either glia or neurons may fall under immune attack. A subset of these diseases has been particularly useful for understanding fundamental neuroscience as well as mechanisms of human disease. This subset involves humoral autoimmune attack on cell surface molecules subserving transmembrane signaling of excitable cells; special emphasis is placed here on proteins involved in synaptic transmission. We begin by reviewing the prototypic humoral autoimmune disease of synaptic transmission, myasthenia gravis. This provides a context for insights obtained from the study of diseases targeting molecules that regulate synaptic transmission at the neuromuscular junction and in the central nervous system. We also explore a disease where autoimmunity produces agonist antibodies acting at two distinct G-protein-coupled receptors. We conclude with an exploration of the vital issue of access of antibodies to targets within the central nervous system and the implications that such access may have in the pathogenesis of poorly understood idiopathic central nervous system diseases.This publication has 91 references indexed in Scilit:
- Peptides Derived from Cardiovascular G-protein-coupled Receptors Induce Morphological Cardiomyopathic Changes in Immunized RabbitsJournal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology, 1997
- Superantigens in Autoimmune Diseases: Still More Shades of GrayImmunological Reviews, 1996
- Expression of complement in the brain: role in health and diseaseImmunology Today, 1996
- Antiadrenergic and muscarinic receptor antibodies in Chagas' cardiomyopathyInternational Journal of Cardiology, 1996
- Anti-M2 muscarinic receptor autoantibodies and idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathyInternational Journal of Cardiology, 1996
- β1-Adrenoceptor autoimmunity in cardiomyopathyInternational Journal of Cardiology, 1996
- In vivo injection of antibodies directed against the cloned μ opioid receptor blocked supraspinal analgesia induced by μ-agonists in miceLife Sciences, 1995
- Myasthenia GravisNew England Journal of Medicine, 1994
- Antibodies inactivating mGluR1 metabotropic glutamate receptor block long-term depression in cultured Purkinje cellsNeuron, 1994
- Passively transferred lambert‐eaton syndrome in mice receiving purified IgGMuscle & Nerve, 1986