Complex gangliosides as autoantibody targets at the neuromuscular junction in Miller Fisher syndrome: a current perspective

GM O'Hanlon, RWM Bullens, JJ Plomp… - Neurochemical …, 2002 - Springer
GM O'Hanlon, RWM Bullens, JJ Plomp, HJ Willison
Neurochemical research, 2002Springer
Glycosphingolipid biology has increasingly interfaced with the field of human autoimmune
neuropathy over the last two decades. There are currently over 20 distinct glycolipids that
have been identified as autoantibody targets in a wide range of clinical neuropathy
syndromes. This review sets out the clinical and experimental background to one interesting
example of anti-glycolipid antibody-associated neuropathy termed Miller Fisher syndrome.
This syndrome, comprising the triad of ataxia, areflexia, and ophthalmoplegia, correlates …
Abstract
Glycosphingolipid biology has increasingly interfaced with the field of human autoimmune neuropathy over the last two decades. There are currently over 20 distinct glycolipids that have been identified as autoantibody targets in a wide range of clinical neuropathy syndromes. This review sets out the clinical and experimental background to one interesting example of anti-glycolipid antibody-associated neuropathy termed Miller Fisher syndrome. This syndrome, comprising the triad of ataxia, areflexia, and ophthalmoplegia, correlates highly with the presence of serum anti-GQ1b antibodies, arising through molecular mimicry with microbial oligosaccharides. Anti-GQ1b antibodies mediate neural injury through binding to GQ1b-enriched sites in the peripheral nervous system, including extraocular nerves. Animal experimental evidence, along with a hypothetical background, indicates the motor nerve terminal may be a key site for anti-GQ1b antibody binding with consequent defects in synaptic transmission, as occurs in botulism and other toxinopathies. Our work in recent years on this hypothesis is summarized.
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