Investigation of the presence of specific neural antibodies in dogs with epilepsy or dyskinesia using murine and human assays

使用鼠类和人类试验调查患有癫痫或运动障碍的狗体内是否存在特定神经抗体

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作者:Lea Hemmeter, Christian G Bien, Corinna I Bien, Andrea Tipold, Jasmin Neßler, Andrea Bathen-Nöthen, Kaspar Matiasek, Maik Dahlhoff, Clare Rusbridge, Carina Rotter Black, Kai Rentmeister, Holger A Volk, Andrea Fischer

Background

Autoimmune mechanisms represent a novel category for causes of seizures and epilepsies in humans, and LGI1-antibody associated limbic encephalitis occurs in cats. Hypothesis/objectives: To investigate the presence of neural antibodies in dogs with epilepsy or dyskinesia of unknown cause using human and murine assays modified for use in dogs. Animals: Fifty-eight dogs with epilepsy of unknown cause or suspected dyskinesia and 57 control dogs.

Methods

Serum and CSF samples were collected prospectively as part of the diagnostic work-up. Clinical data including onset and seizure/episode type were retrieved from the medical records. Screening for neural antibodies was done with cell-based assays transfected with human genes for typical autoimmune encephalitis antigens and tissue-based immunofluorescence assays on mouse hippocampus slices in serum and CSF samples from affected dogs and controls. The commercial human und murine assays were modified with canine-specific secondary antibody. Positive controls were from human samples.

Results

The commercial assays used in this study did not provide unequivocal evidence for presence of neural antibodies in dogs including one dog with histopathologically proven limbic encephalitis. Low titer IgLON5 antibodies were present in serum from one dog from the epilepsy/dyskinesia group and in one dog from the control group.

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