Autoimmune RNA dysregulation and seizures: therapeutic prospects in neuropsychiatric lupus.
Ilham A MuslimovValerio BerardiStacy StephensonEllen M GinzlerJohn G HanlyHenri TiedgePublished in: Life science alliance (2022)
Lupus autoimmunity frequently presents with neuropsychiatric manifestations, but underlying etiology remains poorly understood. Human brain cytoplasmic 200 RNA (BC200 RNA) is a translational regulator in neuronal synapto-dendritic domains. Here, we show that a BC200 guanosine-adenosine dendritic transport motif is recognized by autoantibodies from a subset of neuropsychiatric lupus patients. These autoantibodies impact BC200 functionality by quasi irreversibly displacing two RNA transport factors from the guanosine-adenosine transport motif. Such anti-BC autoantibodies, which can gain access to brains of neuropsychiatric lupus patients, give rise to clinical manifestations including seizures. To establish causality, naive mice with a permeabilized blood-brain barrier were injected with anti-BC autoantibodies from lupus patients with seizures. Animals so injected developed seizure susceptibility with high mortality. Seizure activity was entirely precluded when animals were injected with lupus anti-BC autoantibodies together with BC200 decoy autoantigen. Seizures are a common clinical manifestation in neuropsychiatric lupus, and our work identifies anti-BC autoantibody activity as a mechanistic cause. The results demonstrate potential utility of BC200 decoys for autoantibody-specific therapeutic interventions in neuropsychiatric lupus.
Keyphrases
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- disease activity
- blood brain barrier
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- rheumatoid arthritis
- prognostic factors
- emergency department
- temporal lobe epilepsy
- multiple sclerosis
- metabolic syndrome
- skeletal muscle
- risk assessment
- type diabetes
- cardiovascular disease
- climate change
- hiv infected
- drug induced
- celiac disease