Cargando…
Temporal lobe epilepsy with GAD antibodies: neurons killed by T cells not by complement membrane attack complex
Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is one of the syndromes linked to antibodies against glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD). It has been questioned whether ‘limbic encephalitis with GAD antibodies’ is a meaningful diagnostic entity. The immunopathogenesis of GAD-TLE has remained enigmatic. Improvement of im...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Oxford University Press
2022
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10115353/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36314080 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awac404 |
_version_ | 1785028195135782912 |
---|---|
author | Tröscher, Anna R Mair, Katharina M Verdú de Juan, Laia Köck, Ulrike Steinmaurer, Anja Baier, Hartmut Becker, Albert Blümcke, Ingmar Finzel, Martin Geis, Christian Höftberger, Romana Mawrin, Christian von Oertzen, Tim J Pitsch, Julika Surges, Rainer Voges, Berthold Weis, Serge Winklehner, Michael Woermann, Friedrich Bauer, Jan Bien, Christian G |
author_facet | Tröscher, Anna R Mair, Katharina M Verdú de Juan, Laia Köck, Ulrike Steinmaurer, Anja Baier, Hartmut Becker, Albert Blümcke, Ingmar Finzel, Martin Geis, Christian Höftberger, Romana Mawrin, Christian von Oertzen, Tim J Pitsch, Julika Surges, Rainer Voges, Berthold Weis, Serge Winklehner, Michael Woermann, Friedrich Bauer, Jan Bien, Christian G |
author_sort | Tröscher, Anna R |
collection | PubMed |
description | Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is one of the syndromes linked to antibodies against glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD). It has been questioned whether ‘limbic encephalitis with GAD antibodies’ is a meaningful diagnostic entity. The immunopathogenesis of GAD-TLE has remained enigmatic. Improvement of immunological treatability is an urgent clinical concern. We retrospectively assessed the clinical, MRI and CSF course as well as brain tissue of 15 adult patients with GAD-TLE who underwent temporal lobe surgery. Brain tissue was studied by means of immunohistochemistry, multiplex fluorescent microscopy and transcriptomic analysis for inflammatory mediators and neuronal degeneration. In 10 patients, there was a period of mediotemporal swelling and T(2) signal increase; in nine cases this occurred within the first 6 years after symptom onset. This resulted in unilateral or bilateral hippocampal sclerosis; three cases developed hippocampal sclerosis within the first 2 years. All CSF studies done within the first year (n = 6) revealed intrathecal synthesis of immunoglobulin G. Temporal lobe surgeries were done after a median disease duration of 9 years (range 3 weeks to 60 years). Only two patients became seizure-free. Brain parenchyma collected during surgery in the first 6 years revealed high numbers of plasma cells but no signs of antibody-mediated tissue damage. Even more dense was the infiltration by CD8(+) cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) that were seen to locally proliferate. Further, a portion of these cells revealed an antigen-specific resident memory T cell phenotype. Finally, CTLs with cytotoxic granzyme B(+) granules were also seen in microglial nodules and attached to neurons, suggesting a CTL-mediated destruction of these cells. With longer disease duration, the density of all lymphocytes decreased. Whole transcriptome analysis in early/active cases (but not in late/inactive stages) revealed ‘T cell immunity’ and ‘Regulation of immune processes’ as the largest overrepresented clusters. To a lesser extent, pathways associated with B cells and neuronal degeneration also showed increased representation. Surgically treated patients with GAD-TLE go through an early active inflammatory, ‘encephalitic’ stage (≤6 years) with CTL-mediated, antigen-driven neuronal loss and antibody-producing plasma cells but without signs of complement-mediated cell death. Subsequently, patients enter an apparently immunologically inactive or low-active stage with ongoing seizures, probably caused by the structural damage to the temporal lobe. ‘Limbic encephalitis’ with GAD antibodies should be subsumed under GAD-TLE. The early tissue damage explains why immunotherapy does not usually lead to freedom from seizures. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-10115353 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2022 |
publisher | Oxford University Press |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-101153532023-04-20 Temporal lobe epilepsy with GAD antibodies: neurons killed by T cells not by complement membrane attack complex Tröscher, Anna R Mair, Katharina M Verdú de Juan, Laia Köck, Ulrike Steinmaurer, Anja Baier, Hartmut Becker, Albert Blümcke, Ingmar Finzel, Martin Geis, Christian Höftberger, Romana Mawrin, Christian von Oertzen, Tim J Pitsch, Julika Surges, Rainer Voges, Berthold Weis, Serge Winklehner, Michael Woermann, Friedrich Bauer, Jan Bien, Christian G Brain Original Article Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is one of the syndromes linked to antibodies against glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD). It has been questioned whether ‘limbic encephalitis with GAD antibodies’ is a meaningful diagnostic entity. The immunopathogenesis of GAD-TLE has remained enigmatic. Improvement of immunological treatability is an urgent clinical concern. We retrospectively assessed the clinical, MRI and CSF course as well as brain tissue of 15 adult patients with GAD-TLE who underwent temporal lobe surgery. Brain tissue was studied by means of immunohistochemistry, multiplex fluorescent microscopy and transcriptomic analysis for inflammatory mediators and neuronal degeneration. In 10 patients, there was a period of mediotemporal swelling and T(2) signal increase; in nine cases this occurred within the first 6 years after symptom onset. This resulted in unilateral or bilateral hippocampal sclerosis; three cases developed hippocampal sclerosis within the first 2 years. All CSF studies done within the first year (n = 6) revealed intrathecal synthesis of immunoglobulin G. Temporal lobe surgeries were done after a median disease duration of 9 years (range 3 weeks to 60 years). Only two patients became seizure-free. Brain parenchyma collected during surgery in the first 6 years revealed high numbers of plasma cells but no signs of antibody-mediated tissue damage. Even more dense was the infiltration by CD8(+) cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) that were seen to locally proliferate. Further, a portion of these cells revealed an antigen-specific resident memory T cell phenotype. Finally, CTLs with cytotoxic granzyme B(+) granules were also seen in microglial nodules and attached to neurons, suggesting a CTL-mediated destruction of these cells. With longer disease duration, the density of all lymphocytes decreased. Whole transcriptome analysis in early/active cases (but not in late/inactive stages) revealed ‘T cell immunity’ and ‘Regulation of immune processes’ as the largest overrepresented clusters. To a lesser extent, pathways associated with B cells and neuronal degeneration also showed increased representation. Surgically treated patients with GAD-TLE go through an early active inflammatory, ‘encephalitic’ stage (≤6 years) with CTL-mediated, antigen-driven neuronal loss and antibody-producing plasma cells but without signs of complement-mediated cell death. Subsequently, patients enter an apparently immunologically inactive or low-active stage with ongoing seizures, probably caused by the structural damage to the temporal lobe. ‘Limbic encephalitis’ with GAD antibodies should be subsumed under GAD-TLE. The early tissue damage explains why immunotherapy does not usually lead to freedom from seizures. Oxford University Press 2022-10-31 /pmc/articles/PMC10115353/ /pubmed/36314080 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awac404 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. |
spellingShingle | Original Article Tröscher, Anna R Mair, Katharina M Verdú de Juan, Laia Köck, Ulrike Steinmaurer, Anja Baier, Hartmut Becker, Albert Blümcke, Ingmar Finzel, Martin Geis, Christian Höftberger, Romana Mawrin, Christian von Oertzen, Tim J Pitsch, Julika Surges, Rainer Voges, Berthold Weis, Serge Winklehner, Michael Woermann, Friedrich Bauer, Jan Bien, Christian G Temporal lobe epilepsy with GAD antibodies: neurons killed by T cells not by complement membrane attack complex |
title | Temporal lobe epilepsy with GAD antibodies: neurons killed by T cells not by complement membrane attack complex |
title_full | Temporal lobe epilepsy with GAD antibodies: neurons killed by T cells not by complement membrane attack complex |
title_fullStr | Temporal lobe epilepsy with GAD antibodies: neurons killed by T cells not by complement membrane attack complex |
title_full_unstemmed | Temporal lobe epilepsy with GAD antibodies: neurons killed by T cells not by complement membrane attack complex |
title_short | Temporal lobe epilepsy with GAD antibodies: neurons killed by T cells not by complement membrane attack complex |
title_sort | temporal lobe epilepsy with gad antibodies: neurons killed by t cells not by complement membrane attack complex |
topic | Original Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10115353/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36314080 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awac404 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT troscherannar temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT mairkatharinam temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT verdudejuanlaia temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT kockulrike temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT steinmaureranja temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT baierhartmut temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT beckeralbert temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT blumckeingmar temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT finzelmartin temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT geischristian temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT hoftbergerromana temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT mawrinchristian temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT vonoertzentimj temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT pitschjulika temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT surgesrainer temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT vogesberthold temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT weisserge temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT winklehnermichael temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT woermannfriedrich temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT bauerjan temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex AT bienchristiang temporallobeepilepsywithgadantibodiesneuronskilledbytcellsnotbycomplementmembraneattackcomplex |