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Antibodies to dendritic neuronal surface antigens in opsoclonus myoclonus ataxia syndrome.

Journal of neuroimmunology (2015-08-25)
Jessica A Panzer, Ronan Anand, Josep Dalmau, David R Lynch
ZUSAMMENFASSUNG

Opsoclonus myoclonus ataxia syndrome (OMAS) is an autoimmune disorder characterized by rapid, random, conjugate eye movements (opsoclonus), myoclonus, and ataxia. Given these symptoms, autoantibodies targeting the cerebellum or brainstem could mediate the disease or be markers of autoimmunity. In a subset of patients with OMAS, we identified such autoantibodies, which bind to non-synaptic puncta on the surface of live cultured cerebellar and brainstem neuronal dendrites. These findings implicate autoimmunity to a neuronal surface antigen in the pathophysiology of OMAS. Identification of the targeted antigen(s) could elucidate the mechanisms underlying OMAS and provide a biomarker for diagnosis and response to therapy.

MATERIALIEN
Produktnummer
Marke
Produktbeschreibung

Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-GluR2/3-Antikörper, Upstate®, from rabbit