Characterisation of autoantigen-specific human B cells in central nervous system autoantibody-mediated diseases

Lead Research Organisation: University of Oxford
Department Name: Clinical Neurosciences

Abstract

Background
Our immune system has evolved to protect us from infections. Often, the most effective protection is via its production of antibodies. Antibodies are made by the immune system's 'B cells'. Antibodies can bind to bacteria and directly clear an infection. However, sometimes, they can - in error - recognise our own body as the invader. These so-called 'autoantibodies' lead to 'autoimmune' diseases which affect ~10% of the population and causes significant disability and sometimes death. So, understanding how the body removes the self-reactive B cells is of major importance to develop better treatments.

Autoimmune conditions can affect almost any tissue in the body but, traditionally, the brain has been considered relatively protected. However, over the last decade, we and others have successfully identified 15 brain proteins which are targeted by autoantibodies. This far outweighs the number of similar autoimmune syndromes in any other branch of medicine. Patients with these autoantibodies often have seizures, memory loss and psychiatric symptoms, together called 'encephalitis'. The number of forms of autoimmune encephalitis (AE) continues to grow annually.

Oxford is the UK's major referral centre for patients with AE. 95% of our patients consent to research involvement, so my team can directly study patient samples and link findings to their symptoms and treatment responses. Indeed, our patients show some improvements with available medications which suppress their immune system. However, 80% either cannot return to work, have relapses or experience unacceptable side effects from their medications.

To improve these outcomes for patients, this project aims to direct the discovery of improved medications. Also, as autoimmune diseases are common and B cells are found in the brain in many neurological conditions, our findings will all inform the biology and care of patients with several other illnesses.


Aims of this project:
1. To identify which B cells are the first to become self-reactive and which are the most self-reactive. This will highlight cells that are ideal targets for future therapies, lay the foundations for Aims 2 and 3, and offer explanations about causation to our patients.

This work will study blood donated by our patients and by healthy people. We will separate blood B cells into populations which represent stages of their development. Then, individual populations can be activated to discover the earliest, and the most potent, producers of the autoreactive antibodies. Comparisons to healthy people will show where the self-reactive B cells are successfully cleared. By repeating these studies after patients are treated, we will understand if current therapies can reset the process to that observed in health.


2. To describe molecules exclusively found on the B cells which make the autoantibodies. Targeting these molecules with medications would simultaneously increase effectiveness and reduce side-effect profiles.

Using findings from Aim 1, the most self-reactive B cell populations in blood will be purified. Also, samples from patient spinal fluid will access self-reactive B cells which circulate and contact their ultimate target - the brain. From both sites, we aim to compare the self-reactive to the non self-reactive cells and identify the distinct range of molecules on the former. Work will occur in collaboration with expert cell profilers at Oxford University and Yale University (USA).


3. To ask if certain autoantibodies are especially potent at inducing disease. The B cells that make these would be even more precise targets for future therapies.

From the B cells purified in Aim 2, we will recover multiple autoantibodies. These will be applied to brain cells 'in a dish' and injected into mice, to identify those which most robustly disrupt these systems. Relating this to data from Aim 2 will reveal the profile of the B cells that made the most potent autoantibodies.

Technical Summary

Autoantibody-mediated illnesses are rare throughout medicine. By contrast, over twenty currently exist in neurology. In these conditions, a focused characterisation of the autoantigen-specific B cell lineage offers a highly tractable opportunity to accurately study the underlying human pathology and simultaneously identify highly selective drug targets. As a paradigm, I will use CASPR2-antibody encephalitis as a model disease.

My aims are to:

1. Track the maturation of CASPR2-specifc B-cell lineages across key human lymphoid compartments. I will identify the earliest CASPR2-reactive B cells and their development through lymph nodes into their key site of pathogenic autoantibody production: cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). This will exploit our established methods to isolate individual CASPR2 B cells.

2. Characterise the CASPR2-specific B cells in blood and CSF, to identify molecules which mediate their striking concentration in CSF. Flow cytometry and single cell transcriptomics will identify molecules exclusive to CASPR2-specific B cells. These may represent highly-selective future drug targets and mediate their observed preferential migration to or retention within CSF.

3. Compare the relative pathogenicity of CASPR2-specific monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) derived from CSF B cells in Aim 2. Well-established in vitro and in vivo models will explore the dominant mechanisms of CSF mAbs. This will identify the most pathogenic mAbs as disease biomarkers and their transcriptomes (derived from Aim 2) as even more specific future drug targets.

Overall, these data will molecularly profile a well-defined 'pathway to pathogenicity'. Biologically, they will generalise to identify human autoreactivity checkpoints and mechanisms of B cell access to the CSF. Clinically, the proposal creates a precision medicine paradigm across autoantibody-mediated diseases which will translate to improved treatments for these and other established and putative neuroimmune conditions.

Publications

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Abboud H (2021) Autoimmune encephalitis: proposed recommendations for symptomatic and long-term management. in Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry

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Abboud H (2021) Autoimmune encephalitis: proposed best practice recommendations for diagnosis and acute management. in Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry

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Binks S (2022) Parallel roles of neuroinflammation in feline and human epilepsies. in Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)

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Binks SNM (2024) Fatigue predicts quality of life after leucine-rich glioma-inactivated 1-antibody encephalitis. in Annals of clinical and translational neurology

 
Description Brain podcast host
Geographic Reach Multiple continents/international 
Policy Influence Type Contribution to new or improved professional practice
Impact We aim to educate neurologists, psychiatrists and neuroscientists in key articles form the journal
URL https://academic.oup.com/brain/pages/podcast
 
Description Collaborative research agreement
Amount £150,000 (GBP)
Funding ID HMR04250 
Organisation UCB Pharma 
Sector Private
Country United Kingdom
Start 10/2021 
End 10/2022
 
Description The Autoantibody Collaboration
Amount £631,352 (GBP)
Funding ID HQR02660 
Organisation Momenta Pharmaceuticals 
Sector Private
Country United States
Start 02/2022 
End 01/2025
 
Description Analysis of patient phenotypes associated with LGI1-antibodies 
Organisation Krankenhaus Bethanien
Country Germany 
Sector Hospitals 
PI Contribution Collation of patient cohorts, data analysis, paper writing
Collaborator Contribution Patient data and identification
Impact Thompson J, Bi M, Murchison AG, Makuch M, Bien CG, Chu K, Farooque P, Gelfand JM, Geschwind MD, Hirsch LJ, Somerville E, Lang B, Vincent A, Leite MI, Waters P, Irani SR, and The FBDS study group. The importance of early immunotherapy in 103 patients with faciobrachial dystonic seizures. Brain. 2018 Feb 1;141(2):348-356. doi: 10.1093/brain/awx323. Editors choice. PMID: 29272336.
Start Year 2016
 
Description Analysis of patient phenotypes associated with LGI1-antibodies 
Organisation Seoul National University
Country Korea, Republic of 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Collation of patient cohorts, data analysis, paper writing
Collaborator Contribution Patient data and identification
Impact Thompson J, Bi M, Murchison AG, Makuch M, Bien CG, Chu K, Farooque P, Gelfand JM, Geschwind MD, Hirsch LJ, Somerville E, Lang B, Vincent A, Leite MI, Waters P, Irani SR, and The FBDS study group. The importance of early immunotherapy in 103 patients with faciobrachial dystonic seizures. Brain. 2018 Feb 1;141(2):348-356. doi: 10.1093/brain/awx323. Editors choice. PMID: 29272336.
Start Year 2016
 
Description Analysis of patient phenotypes associated with LGI1-antibodies 
Organisation University of California, San Francisco
Department Memory and Ageing Centre UCSF
Country United States 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Collation of patient cohorts, data analysis, paper writing
Collaborator Contribution Patient data and identification
Impact Thompson J, Bi M, Murchison AG, Makuch M, Bien CG, Chu K, Farooque P, Gelfand JM, Geschwind MD, Hirsch LJ, Somerville E, Lang B, Vincent A, Leite MI, Waters P, Irani SR, and The FBDS study group. The importance of early immunotherapy in 103 patients with faciobrachial dystonic seizures. Brain. 2018 Feb 1;141(2):348-356. doi: 10.1093/brain/awx323. Editors choice. PMID: 29272336.
Start Year 2016
 
Description Analysis of patient phenotypes associated with LGI1-antibodies 
Organisation University of New South Wales
Country Australia 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Collation of patient cohorts, data analysis, paper writing
Collaborator Contribution Patient data and identification
Impact Thompson J, Bi M, Murchison AG, Makuch M, Bien CG, Chu K, Farooque P, Gelfand JM, Geschwind MD, Hirsch LJ, Somerville E, Lang B, Vincent A, Leite MI, Waters P, Irani SR, and The FBDS study group. The importance of early immunotherapy in 103 patients with faciobrachial dystonic seizures. Brain. 2018 Feb 1;141(2):348-356. doi: 10.1093/brain/awx323. Editors choice. PMID: 29272336.
Start Year 2016
 
Description Analysis of patient phenotypes associated with LGI1-antibodies 
Organisation Yale University
Department School of Medicine
Country United States 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Collation of patient cohorts, data analysis, paper writing
Collaborator Contribution Patient data and identification
Impact Thompson J, Bi M, Murchison AG, Makuch M, Bien CG, Chu K, Farooque P, Gelfand JM, Geschwind MD, Hirsch LJ, Somerville E, Lang B, Vincent A, Leite MI, Waters P, Irani SR, and The FBDS study group. The importance of early immunotherapy in 103 patients with faciobrachial dystonic seizures. Brain. 2018 Feb 1;141(2):348-356. doi: 10.1093/brain/awx323. Editors choice. PMID: 29272336.
Start Year 2016
 
Description Lymph node sampling in patients with autoantibody mediated CNS diseases 
Organisation University of Liverpool
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We sampled and analysed samples of lymph nodes from patients recruited by colleagues Liverpool who look after a rare disease cohort
Collaborator Contribution As above
Impact Paper in press - Al Diwani et al Brain; and one under revisions (with PNAS)
Start Year 2018
 
Description Seizure induction with monoclonal antibodies 
Organisation Aston University
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We designed and generated monoclonal antibodies which our collaborators are injecting into mice to observe seizures
Collaborator Contribution as above
Impact Paper in draft
Start Year 2021
 
Title Clnical trial - UK CI; RCT of FcRN inhibitor in LGI1 antibody encephalitis. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04875975. UK CI. 
Description UK CI on a RCT of FcRN inhibitor in LGI1 antibody encephalitis. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04875975. UK CI. 
Type Therapeutic Intervention - Drug
Current Stage Of Development Early clinical assessment
Year Development Stage Completed 2013
Development Status Actively seeking support
Impact This is the second RCT in the field I work in - autoimmune encephalitis - and an industry sponsored RCT 
URL https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04875975