Factors predisposing to humoral autoimmunity against brain-antigens in health and disease: Analysis of 49 autoantibodies in over 7000 subjects

Begemann M.; Lühder F.; Nave K.A.; Zipp F.; Ehrenreich H.; Daguano Gastaldi V.; BH Wilke J.; Weidinger C.A.; Walter C.; Barnkothe N.; Teegen B.; Luessi F.; Stöcker W.

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Background: Circulating autoantibodies (AB) against brain-antigens, often deemed pathological, receive increasing attention. We assessed predispositions and seroprevalence/characteristics of 49 AB in > 7000 individuals. Methods: Exploratory cross-sectional cohort study, investigating deeply phenotyped neuropsychiatric patients and healthy individuals of GRAS Data Collection for presence/characteristics of 49 brain-directed serum-AB. Predispositions were evaluated through GWAS of NMDAR1-AB carriers, analyses of immune check-point genotypes, APOE4 status, neurotrauma. Chi-square, Fisher's exact tests and logistic regression analyses were used. Results: Study of N = 7025 subjects (55.8 % male; 41 ± 16 years) revealed N = 1133 (16.13 %) carriers of any AB against 49 defined brain-antigens. Overall, age dependence of seroprevalence (OR = 1.018/year; 95 % CI [1.015–1.022]) emerged, but no disease association, neither general nor with neuropsychiatric subgroups. Males had higher AB seroprevalence (OR = 1.303; 95 % CI [1.144–1.486]). Immunoglobulin class (N for IgM:462; IgA:487; IgG:477) and titers were similar. Abundant were NMDAR1-AB (7.7 %). Low seroprevalence (1.25 %-0.02 %) was seen for most AB (e.g., amphiphysin, KCNA2, ARHGAP26, GFAP, CASPR2, MOG, Homer-3, KCNA1, GLRA1b, GAD65). Non-detectable were others. GWAS of NMDAR1-AB carriers revealed three genome-wide significant SNPs, two intergenic, one in TENM3, previously autoimmune disease-associated. Targeted analysis of immune check-point genotypes (CTLA4, PD1, PD-L1) uncovered effects on humoral anti-brain autoimmunity (OR = 1.55; 95 % CI [1.058–2.271]) and disease likelihood (OR = 1.43; 95 % CI [1.032–1.985]). APOE4 carriers (∼19 %) had lower seropositivity (OR = 0.766; 95 % CI [0.625–0.933]). Neurotrauma predisposed to NMDAR1-AB seroprevalence (IgM: OR = 1.599; 95 % CI [1.022–2.468]). Conclusions: Humoral autoimmunity against brain-antigens, frequent across health and disease, is predicted by age, gender, genetic predisposition, and brain injury. Seroprevalence, immunoglobulin class, or titers do not predict disease.

Details about the publication

JournalBrain, Behavior, and Immunity (Brain Behav Immun)
Volume108
Page range135-147
StatusPublished
Release year2023
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1016/j.bbi.2022.10.016
Link to the full texthttps://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/85143584528
KeywordsNMDAR1-AB; Immune check-point genotypes; Age; APOE4; Genetic predisposition; GWAS; Brain injury; Gender

Authors from the University of Münster

Walter, Carolin
Institute of Medical Informatics