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Winter 2003
Anti-Glycolipid antibodies in GBS
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It is an honor for me to be invited to serve on the medical
advisory board of the Guillain-Barré Syndrome Foundation International
and to have an opportunity to write an article for this issue of the communicator.
Over recent years I have been closely involved in the medical advisory
board of the UK sister organization, the Guillain-Barré Syndrome
support group and we all welcome the international effort that is afoot
to improve the outcome of patients affected by this illness. I am particularly
interested in understanding the cause of GBS, through research into basic
pathophysiological mechanisms and have developed a special interest in
the antibody responses to verve carbohydrate antigens. These carbohydrate
structures are most commonly found on glycolipids. Glycolipids, which
when sialylated are termed gangliosides, are a large family of sphingolipids
highly enriched in the nervous system where they are involved in diverse
biological functions. The flames of this subject were first lit in the
mid-1980s around the time I was a visiting fellow in the laboratory of
Dr. Richard Quarles at the National Institutes of Health, in Bethesda,
Maryland. Dick is one of the founding fathers of this field and laid the
cornerstone, the anti-MAG antibody, through meticulous scientific analysis.
This led to the discovery of glycolipids and anti-glycolipid antibodies
in peripheral nerve disorders. The first scientific paper on this subject
in relation to GBS came form Dick’s laboratory, in conjunction with
formidable team of GBS research centered around johns Hopkins Hospital
in Baltimore. Dick takes no short cuts and always experiments carefully
and with intellectual riguor: as such he was a great mentor to me and
inspired me to continue working in the field to this day, and for along
into the future as I can anticipate. My years spent in the USA were very
fruitful and I retain many friends who still work on GBS, some in the
USA, and others further afield. We are truly an international community,
and this is a great felling.
Since the mid-1980s, there has been remarkable progress in our understanding
of the clinical pathophysiology of autoimmune neuropathies that shows
no sign of slowing down, particularly the continued identification and
analysis of antibodies to gangliosides and related glycolipids in the
serum of patients. Antiglycolipid antibodies react with epitopes on the
carbohydrate region of glycolipid molecules and can be routinely measured
by standard immunoassays. From a clinical diagnostic perspective, they
are very useful. For example, in multifocal motor neuropathy, IgM anti-GM1
antibodies are detectable in around 50% of cases. This condition clinically
resembles lower motor neuron disease. IgM anti-GD1b antibodies are found
in IgM paraproteinaemic neuropathy characterized by profound sensory ataxia.
In the anti-myelin associated glycoprotein (anti-MAG) IgM paraproteinaemic
neuropathy, antibodies also react with the acidic glycolipids, sulphated
glucuronyl paragloboside and its higher lactosaminyl homologue (SGPG and
SGLG). Thus a variety of chronic syndromes can be defined by their anti-glycolipid
antibody profile and those interested in supporting GBS should not forget
the importance of this group of closely related chronic neuropathy syndromes.
In Guillain-Barrp syndrome, anti-GM1, GM1b, GD1a and GalNAc-GD1a antibodies
are found in patients with the GBS variant termed acute motor axonal neuropathy
(AMAN). These antibodies tend to be IgG class, arise transiently following
preceding infections, especially Campylobacter jejuni, and disappear concomitant
with clinical recovery. Molecular mimicry (the sharing of antigenic determinants
between microbial and host carbohydrate structures) is believed to be
the principle mechanism by which they arise. In the acute inflammatory
demyelinating polyneuropathy (AIDP) pattern of GBS that is predominant
in the USA and in Europe, anti-glycolipid antibodies are less commonly
found, although are certainly present in a proportion of cases. GBS occurring
in association with Cytomegalovirus infection has been linked with anti-GM2
antibodies. Affected patients have prominent sensory symptoms and cranial
nerve involvement. Mycoplasma pneumonia infection preceding GBS is occasionally
found in association with anti-GalC antibodies. The significance of finding
antibodies to CalC lies in the experimental demonstration that they are
capable of inducing morphological and electrophysiological evidence of
demyelination. Anti-LM1 and SGPG antibodies have also been reported in
AIDP. Understanding this area in more detail remains one of the most pressing
areas for research. Are these types of antibodies more frequently present,
but hiding for our view, or are they absent in many cases? If the former
is the case, we should be looking harder; if the latter is the case, we
should be looking elsewhere. In practice both these avenues are being
pursued in laboratories around the world.
Miller Fisher syndrome (MFS), or Fisher’s syndrome is the regional
variant of GBS that has been of great interest to me since the discovery
of anti-GQ1b antibodies. MFS accounts for 5-10% of cases and was first
described in 1956 as the clinical triad of ophthalmoplegia, ataxia and
areflexia. Since then MFS has evolved as a nosological entity to take
into account closely related variants, principally characterized by acute
cranial neuropathy with ataxia. Bickerstaff described a now eponymous
syndrome in which MFS occurs in conjunction with brain stem involvement,
comprising pyramidal tract signs and impaired consciousness. Anti-Go1b
ganglioside antibodies were first identified in MFS in a landmark study
published in 1992 and this has since been substantiated in many other
reports. Anti-GQ1b antibodies are a very sensitive and specific marker
ofr MFS and related syndromes characterized by ophthalmoplegia. Anti-GQ1b
antibodies are present in over 90% of cases during the acute phase but
may disappear rapidly, often being absent during convalescence.
Diagnostic testing for these types of antibodies in GBS should be conducted
on serum samples drawn early in the course of the disease. Howerever,
it is important to recognize that such testing can never substitute for
detailed clinical and electrophysiological analysis that generally yields
more useful information to the clinician. Thus much of the data on antiglycolipid
antibodies remains research orientated, rather than of primary use in
practice. This does not diminish its importance, but simply provides an
alternative focus to the debate. It is dangerous to predict the future
of research, but I firmly believe that understanding hose anti-glycolipid
antibodies injure nerves, and designing strategies for preventing this,
will form on of the main areas for future progress in improving the outcome
of patients with GBS. Judging by the amount of research taking place worldwide
in this area, I am clearly not alone in this view. Organizations such
as the GBS Foundation international and GBS support group UK provide a
wonderful forum for highlighting this disease and I am very pleased to
contribute wherever possible.