Autoantibodies targeting the GABAA receptor (GABAAR) hallmark an autoimmune encephalitis presenting with frequent seizures and psychomotor abnormalities. Their pathogenic role is still not well-defined, given the common overlap with further autoantibodies and the lack of patient-derived mAbs. Five GABAAR mAbs from cerebrospinal fluid cells bound to various epitopes involving the α1 and γ2 receptor subunits, with variable binding strength and partial competition. mAbs selectively reduced GABAergic currents in neuronal cultures without causing receptor internalization. Cerebroventricular infusion of GABAAR mAbs and Fab fragments into rodents induced a severe phenotype with seizures and increased mortality, reminiscent of encephalitis patients’ symptoms. Our results demonstrate direct pathogenicity of autoantibodies on GABAARs independent of Fc-mediated effector functions and provide an animal model for GABAAR encephalitis. They further provide the scientific rationale for clinical treatments using antibody depletion and can serve as tools for the development of antibody-selective immunotherapies.
Introduction
γ-Aminobutyric acid receptors of class A (GABAARs) are key molecules for physiological brain function, transmitting rapid phasic inhibitory synaptic signaling and mediating tonic inhibition at extrasynaptic and perisynaptic locations (Farrant and Nusser, 2005). The pentameric ligand-gated chloride channels can be composed of different subunits (α1–6, β1–3, γ1–3, δ, ε, π, θ, and σ1–3), most abundantly in the α1β2γ2 configuration (Olsen and Sieghart, 2008). Receptor dysfunction can lead to severe neurological symptoms, such as epileptic encephalopathies based on GABAAR subunit mutations (Hernandez et al., 2019; Lachance-Touchette et al., 2010; Maljevic et al., 2006; Wallace et al., 2001). Recently, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum autoantibodies targeting the α1-, β3-, and γ2-subunits of GABAARs were identified in a new form of autoimmune encephalitis presenting with seizures, refractory status epilepticus, cognitive alterations, psychomotor disorders, and magnetic resonance imaging abnormalities (Ohkawa et al., 2014; Petit-Pedrol et al., 2014; Pettingill et al., 2015; Spatola et al., 2017). Patients’ sera or CSF containing polyclonal GABAAR antibodies caused down-regulation of surface GABAAR and electrophysiological changes in cultured neurons (Ohkawa et al., 2014; Petit-Pedrol et al., 2014; Pettingill et al., 2015).
Patients with GABAAR encephalitis frequently harbor further established pathogenic autoantibodies such as those targeting Leucine-rich, glioma inactivated 1 (LGI1), Contactin associated protein 1 (CASPR2), and N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR; Ohkawa et al., 2014; Petit-Pedrol et al., 2014; Pettingill et al., 2015); hence, it is unclear whether the observed effects exclusively relate to GABAAR antibodies. Interestingly, in a subset of patients, antibodies against intracellular glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 (GAD65) were observed (Petit-Pedrol et al., 2014), and recently, strongly expanded CD8+ T cell clones have been described (Bracher et al., 2020), both pointing toward an accompanying T cell–driven immune response.
In this current study, we aimed to characterize the intrathecal human mAb repertoire from antibody-secreting cells (ASCs) and B cells from CSF in acute GABAAR encephalitis. Using recombinant production of CSF-derived mAbs (Kornau et al., 2020; Kreye et al., 2016), we generated a set of GABAAR mAbs for the characterization of antibody sequence features, epitope mapping, and pathogenic functional effects in vitro and in vivo, independent of confounding factors.
Results
Monoclonal CSF antibodies from an encephalitis patient target GABAAR and non-GABAAR antigens
To investigate the functional role of GABAAR antibodies in encephalitis pathogenesis, we first explored the monoclonal Ig repertoire in the CSF of a pediatric GABAAR encephalitis patient presenting with catatonia (Nikolaus et al., 2018). The antibody response was captured from single cells of three populations: CD138+ ASCs, CD20+CD27+ memory B cells (MBCs), and CD20+CD27− nonmemory B cells (NMBCs), separated via fluorescence-activated cell sorting (Fig. S1 A). Using single-cell cloning (Kreye et al., 2020; Kreye et al., 2016), we generated 67 recombinant human mAbs, which were screened for GABAAR reactivity on cell-based assays (CBAs) and on unfixed murine whole brain sections as an unbiased test for central nervous system (CNS) auto-reactivity.
We identified five different human GABAAR mAbs. Four reacted positive in two CBAs using human embryonic kidney (HEK) cells expressing either α1β3 (comparable to clinical routine assays) or α1β3γ2 GABAARs (Fig. S1 B). In contrast, mAb #113-175 bound to GABAARs on the α1β3γ2 CBA only (Fig. S1 B). All five mAbs revealed strong tissue reactivity on murine brain sections (Fig. 1, A–C; and Fig. S3, A–D), most prominently against hippocampal neuropil (Fig. 1, A and B), the granule cell and molecular layer in the cerebellum, putamen, and olfactory bulb. Reactivity to the extracellular domain of GABAAR was confirmed on cultured live rat neurons (Fig. 1 C) and showed a clustered distribution of GABAARs along Microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2)–positive dendrites (Fig. 1 D), overlapping with a commercial rabbit GABAAR-α1 antibody and colocalizing with presynaptic vesicular GABA transporter (VGAT; Fig. 1 E). In addition to a typical neuronal GABAAR-binding pattern, #113-201 revealed intense reactivity against choroid plexus and around blood vessels (Fig. S2, C and E), in locations where no β1-, β2-, or β3-subunits could be detected (Fig. S2, F–H). β-subunits are essential for functional GABAAR, thus indicating an additional target for #113-201 independent of GABAAR. #113-201 (and all other GABAAR mAbs) did not bind to established polyreactivity-defining antigens (Fig. S1, J–O), suggesting that this additional reactivity is specific to a distinct target rather than a feature of unspecific binding to a broad variety of antigens.
17 of the expressed GABAAR-negative mAbs (27.9%) showed intense tissue binding on unfixed murine brain sections in distinct patterns, mostly on neuronal surfaces of the hippocampus, the cerebellum, and in basal ganglia, but others also against blood vessels, choroid plexus, ependyma, and white matter tracts (Fig. 1, F–J; and Fig. S2, I–P). A subset also reacted with fixed cultured neurons (Fig. 1, H–J, inserts). Screening for already established neuronal antigens with commercial assays identified Homer-3 as the target of #113-212 (Fig. 1 J), while the other non-GABAAR antigens remained unknown.
Polyclonal response to GABAARs derived mainly from IgG1 antibody–secreting cells
We next investigated sequence features of the GABAAR encephalitis Ig repertoire. mAbs derived from different cell populations revealed characteristic Ig isotype distributions (Fig. S1 C and Table S1). All GABAAR mAbs were of the IgG1 subtype (Fig. S1 D) and derived predominantly from ASCs, also from one MBC, but not from NMBCs (Fig. S1 E). In contrast, CNS tissue-reactive, but GABAAR-negative mAbs were similarly distributed within different cell populations (Table S1). Among all mAb sequences, no clonal relationships were identified, indicating a polyclonal response to GABAARs. Compatible with affinity maturation well known from B cells in other compartments, CSF-derived mAbs from MBCs carried more somatic hypermutations (SHMs) than mAbs from NMBCs on heavy chains, light chains, and per mAb in total (22.6 ± 12.8 vs. 10.1 ± 8.6; P = 0.0001, ANOVA, post hoc Tukey’s multiple comparisons test; Fig. S1 F and Table S1). SHM counts of ASC mAbs (14.2 ± 1.9) were between those of MBC and NMBC mAbs (Fig. S1 F). GABAAR mAbs contained a similar number of SHMs as GABAAR-negative mAbs (Fig. S1 G). Within GABAAR mAbs, SHMs were higher in frequency and replacement to silence ratios in complementarity-determining regions (CDRs) than in frame regions (FRs; Fig. S1, H and I), characteristic of antigen-driven maturation.
Patient-derived mAbs bound α1- and γ2-subunits of GABAAR with different strengths and partial competition
To select the most relevant antibodies for functional studies, we aimed to characterize the subunit specificity and the binding strength of the isolated GABAARs mAbs. To this end, we first performed a series of CBAs expressing individual rodent GABAAR subunits or combinations thereof. The patient samples of CSF and plasmapheresis eluate (PPE) containing polyclonal antibodies showed predominantly an α1 reactivity. Additionally, they bound very weakly to cells expressing subunit combinations of α2β3, α5β3 (CSF and PPE), and β3γ2 (PPE only; Fig. 2 A and Fig. S3 A). mAb stainings confirmed the α1 subunit as the main immunogenic target of the GABAAR (Fig. 2 A and Fig. S3 A) and excluded binding to α1–5-, β1–3-, or γ2-subunits for all further mAbs with anti-neuronal reactivity (Fig. 2 A, exemplarily shown for #113-109). Whereas GABAAR mAbs #113-101, #113-115, and #113-198 selectively target α1, #113-201 additionally bound γ2 as an independent target (Fig. 2 A). GABAAR reactivity of #113-175 is also α1 and γ2 mediated but requires their coexpression (Fig. 2 A and Fig. S3 A), suggesting that #113-175 recognizes a three-dimensional epitope of α1γ2-containing GABAAR heteromers.
For the identification of the mAb with the strongest binding to natively expressed GABAARs, we then quantified binding of purified mAbs at serial dilutions to murine cerebellum (Fig. 2 B). Binding curves were derived from mean fluorescence intensities (MFIs) to quantify maximum intensity (MFImax) and concentrations at which 50% of MFImax is reached (Half Max; Table S2). #113-115 showed strongest reactivity (Fig. 2 B, red), as indicated by lowest Half Max of 160 ng/ml, which was ∼40-fold higher than that of the weakest binder #113-201 (Fig. 2 B, orange). Models from four out of five mAbs displayed similar MFImax. This indicates likewise similar available binding sites, which for α1-selective mAbs are represented by the presence of two α1-subunits and therefore two binding sites per heteropentameric GABAAR. In contrast, the target epitope of #113-175 involves the α1- and γ2-subunit and therefore can likely be present only once per GABAAR. Consistently, mAb #113-175 reached a considerably lower MFImax, but with a similar concentration dependency as #113-115 (Fig. 2 B, purple). In a complementary assay using flow cytometry, we found similar binding to HEK cells overexpressing rat α1β3γ2 GABAAR for all five mAbs (Fig. S3, B–D and F; and Table S2). In contrast, when using HEK cells overexpressing human α1β3γ2 GABAAR, Half Max values were similar for four out of five mAbs only and were ∼200-fold lower for #113-201 (Fig. S3, E and G; and Table S2), indicating preferential binding to the human receptor.
As GABAAR binding for all mAbs involves α1, we analyzed whether target epitopes are identical or in close proximity in a competition assay. GABAAR mAbs were fluorophore-coupled and used for quantitative detection of binding to murine cerebellum. The binding of each fluorophore-coupled GABAAR mAb was abrogated in the presence of its respective unlabeled mAb at excess, but not when coapplied with nonreactive control mAb #mGO53 (Fig. 2 C). Quantification of all possible pairings of GABAAR mAbs revealed that certain mAbs can decrease the binding of other GABAAR mAbs (Fig. 2 C, black tiles), suggesting competition for overlapping target epitopes. In contrast, #113-201 did not influence receptor binding of any other GABAAR mAb. Interestingly, the binding signal of #113-101 was markedly increased in the presence of unlabeled #113-115 (Fig. 2 C, yellow tile) and similarly with #113-115 fragment antigen-binding (Fab) fragments (Fig. S3 H). As #113-101 did not directly bind #113-115 (Fig. S3, I and J), this finding suggests conformational GABAAR changes induced by #113-115 binding, leading to increased #113-101 epitope accessibility in vitro.
mAb #113-115 selectively reduced GABAergic currents without causing receptor internalization
Next, we explored the pathogenic relevance of single GABAAR mAbs on GABAergic functions in vitro. We selected #113-115, being the mAb with strongest binding to native GABAARs, and #113-175, which depends on α1γ2 coexpression. In electrophysiological recordings from cultured autaptic neurons incubated for 24 h with 1 µg/ml of #113-175, we observed no differences with untreated and control conditions. In contrast, #113-115 led to reduced inhibitory postsynaptic signaling, as indicated in lower amplitudes of evoked inhibitory postsynaptic currents (IPSCs; Fig. 3, A and C), in comparison with untreated condition and with control mAb treatment (#113-115: 0.31 ± 0.09 SEM; untreated: 1 ± 0.12, P < 0.0001, Kruskal-Wallis, Dunn’s post hoc; control: 0.91 ± 0.16, P = 0.0037). This effect was GABA specific, as amplitudes of selective responses to GABA (Fig. 3, B and D) were likewise reduced (#113-115: 0.55 ± 0.06; untreated: 1 ± 0.09, P = 0.0011; control: 1.02 ± 0.07, P = 0.0001), whereas responses to kainate and NMDA remained unaffected (Fig. 3, E and F).
Previous studies using patients’ sera or CSF containing GABAAR antibodies suggested receptor internalization as a pathogenic mechanism in GABAAR encephalitis. To examine this mechanism at the level of mAbs, we quantified protein levels from neuronal cultures after mAb incubation (Fig. S4, A–C; and Fig. 3, G–J). The expression levels of GABAAR and control protein glutamate receptor 1 (GluR1) were unaltered under mAb treatment and control conditions, both in the total protein (Fig. 3, G and H) and in the surface protein fractions (Fig. 3, I and J). Control experiments ensured the presence and stability of mAbs after the culture conditions (Fig. S4, D and E). These results were independently confirmed using reader-based immunocytochemistry to quantify surface GABAAR levels of neuronal cultures, which displayed no changes between all groups (Fig. S4 F).
Cerebroventricular infusion of #113-115 IgG and Fab fragments induced encephalopathic symptoms and increased mortality
The effects observed in vitro indicate direct pathogenicity of antibody–antigen binding, independent of receptor internalization, a mechanism related to bivalent antibody-mediated cross-linking (Hughes et al., 2010). To explore the role of the antibody’s bivalence for its functionality, we generated and characterized a monovalent Fab fragment version of #113-115 lacking the fragment crystallizable (Fc) domain (Fig. S5, A and B). Next, we used the #113-115 IgG and Fab to assess whether they can similarly induce pathogenic effects in vivo when applied in mice by continuous cerebroventricular infusion via osmotic pumps.
Within a few days after implantation, six out of seven mice of the #113-115 IgG high-dose (1.5 µg of IgG per hour) group and all five mice of the #113-115 Fab high-dose group developed encephalopathic symptoms compatible with impaired GABAergic inhibition, including myoclonus, twitching, gait ataxia, and circling (Video 1 and Table S3). In the #113-115 IgG low-dose group (0.3 µg per hour) only two out of six mice developed similar symptoms, which started later after pump implantation. No disease symptoms were observed in the control mice after mAb #mGO53 infusion. All symptomatic mice in the #113-115 IgG high-dose and #113-115 Fab group died or had to be sacrificed after reaching predefined humane endpoints, commonly status epilepticus (Fig. 4 D and Table S3).
Extracted brains from #113-115–infused but not #mGO53-infused mice revealed intense deposition of human IgG or Fab in a characteristic GABAAR distribution pattern (Fig. 4, A–C), indicating in vivo antigen binding. However, the levels of GABAAR and control proteins from homogenized extracted brains showed no differences between the groups (Fig. 4, E–H), consistent with the in vitro data (Fig. 3, G–J; and Fig. S4 F).
GABAAR mAbs caused spontaneous seizures in vivo and spontaneous epileptic activity ex vivo
The mAb-induced in vivo phenotype suggested hyperexcitability and seizures. We used a wireless electroencephalography (EEG) system to further evaluate the influence of GABAAR mAbs on electric activity at lower concentrations not causing mortality. We examined 15 male Wistar P21 rats that received cerebroventricular infusion of GABAAR mAbs or controls over 7 d and were concurrently implanted with EEG transmitters to record ictal events (Fig. 5 A). The EEG coastline length was significantly higher in the GABAAR mAb–infused animals, indicating increased epileptiform activity (Fig. 5 B). For the application of #113-115 and also of α1γ2-dependent #113-175, this correlated with an increase of ictal events as detected by the automated seizure detection program (Fig. 5, C and D), including Racine stage 5 seizures (Fig. S5 C and Video 2; Lüttjohann et al., 2009). In a subgroup of three GABAAR mAb–infused animals, we performed prolonged EEG recordings over 21 d. Ictal events were detected until the end of the recording period, although at a lower level than during the infusion (Fig. S5 D), correlating also with a peak in the postseizure behavioral battery (PSBB) score, indicating the animals’ hyperexcitability and aggression (Fig. S5 E). The EEG of the GABAAR mAb animals showed significantly higher power in all the power band ranges (Fig. 5 E).
After the completion of infusion with GABAAR or control mAbs (days 7–8), acute sagittal brain slices were prepared for local field potential recordings to assess for spontaneous epileptic activity from electrodes placed in areas CA3 and CA1 of the hippocampus. There were significantly higher numbers of spontaneous epileptic events during recordings from the GABAAR mAb–infused animals at day 7/8 and at day 21 compared with controls from day 7/8 (Fig. 5, F and G). This shows a preservation of the prolonged epileptic activity seen in vivo from depth electrode recordings of the GABAAR mAb–infused animals.
Discussion
Here, we provide insight into the CSF antibody repertoire of acute GABAAR encephalitis. So far, only a few studies have investigated patient-derived mAbs from different forms of autoantibody-mediated encephalitis. These reports included either only a single target-specific mAb (Brändle et al., 2021; Malviya et al., 2017) or only mAbs that were isolated from the periphery (Ramberger et al., 2020; Sharma et al., 2018) and also did not observe a phenotype mimicking the patients’ key symptoms (Malviya et al., 2017; Ramberger et al., 2020; Sharma et al., 2018) or completely lacked in vivo data (Brändle et al., 2021; Kornau et al., 2020; Kreye et al., 2016). In contrast, we here present a systematic characterization of the functional role of patient-derived disease-specific anti-neuronal autoantibodies in GABAAR encephalitis. Using a recombinant single-cell cloning approach, we isolated five monoclonal human GABAAR autoantibodies and comprehensively showed that they recognized GABAARs in vitro and in vivo, induced electrophysiological effects independent of receptor internalization, and caused a severe encephalitic phenotype in two rodent models. Unlike human serum or CSF containing polyclonal autoantibodies against GABAAR and potentially other targets, the mAbs allowed the detailed analysis of antibody sequences, epitope mapping, and autoantibody-specific pathogenic functional effects, resulting in a number of novel findings.
The identified GABAAR mAbs revealed typical indicators of affinity maturation, similar to LGI1 mAbs (Kornau et al., 2020; Ramberger et al., 2020) and in contrast to NMDAR mAbs that we and others have reported with low SHM numbers (Kreye et al., 2016; Malviya et al., 2017) or even in germline configuration (Wenke et al., 2019). The main epitope of all five GABAAR mAbs was the α1 receptor subunit, as suggested from previous studies using polyclonal patient samples (Petit-Pedrol et al., 2014; Pettingill et al., 2015) and by one mAb that has recently been reported (Brändle et al., 2021). However, in our study one mAb independently codetected the γ2-subunit, and another bound to a shared epitope requiring both α1 and γ2 receptor subunits. Importantly, the latter mAb therefore cannot be detected in current commercial CBAs that use α1β3 GABAAR, with the potential implication that routine diagnostics in acute encephalitis may underestimate disease-relevant GABAAR antibody titers or even overlook affected patients, in case patients harbor only antibodies directed to γ2 receptor subunits in their polyclonal antibody response. The target epitopes of some GABAAR mAbs were identical or in close proximity, as shown in our antibody competition assays and indicated from prior experiments with the limitations of CSF polyclonality (Petit-Pedrol et al., 2014). Conversely, the presence of mAb #113-115 did not reduce but enhanced binding of mAb #113-101 to the GABAAR. This suggests a direct conformational change of the receptor upon mAb binding, thus potentially adding a new pathogenic principle to the complexity of antibody-induced effects in autoimmune encephalitis. Likewise, conformational effects of disease-relevant mAbs may in some cases stabilize the receptor in a specific activation state, similar to nanobodies that, in this way, allowed first structure crystallography of G protein–coupled receptors complexed with their G protein (Rasmussen et al., 2011).
Our functional investigations in vitro and in vivo showed the pathogenicity of the two selected GABAAR mAbs #113-115 and α1γ2-dependent #113-175. Cerebroventricular infusion of both mAbs induced a severe phenotype with seizures and increased mortality, similar to encephalitis patients and in line with epileptic encephalopathies in GABAAR mutation carriers (Hernandez et al., 2019; Lachance-Touchette et al., 2010; Maljevic et al., 2006; Wallace et al., 2001). However, electrophysiological recordings from autaptic neuronal cultures revealed a reduction of GABAergic currents for mAb #113-115, but not for α1γ2-dependent #113-175. The observed increase of epileptiform activity in vivo after #113-175 infusion may, among other reasons, be mediated via yet unknown factor(s) that are not present in vitro, via receptor modulation (e.g., by affecting the access of benzodiazepine-like compounds) or via network effects, and thus may not be detectable in all cases in the autaptic in vitro model. For both mAbs, we did not observe receptor internalization, a previously highlighted mechanism (Ohkawa et al., 2014; Pettingill et al., 2015). Possible explanations for the different findings include the use of patient samples containing polyclonal antibodies with undetermined additional specificities in previous studies and the presence of GABAAR β3-subunit antibodies not assessed in our study. For #113-115, the electrophysiological findings and missing internalization together with the suggested change of receptor conformation indicate direct functional effects upon mAb binding. Possible mechanisms include stabilization of the receptor in a desensitized state similar to the GABAAR agonist benzamidine (Miller and Aricescu, 2014), allosteric modulation of the physiological GABA-binding affinity and/or neurotransmission efficacy, and orthosteric GABA antagonism. Additionally, redistribution of GABAAR between synaptic and extrasynaptic locations may further contribute to GABAergic dysfunction, as likewise reported from NMDAR autoantibodies (Jézéquel et al., 2017; Ladépêche et al., 2018). Pathogenic mechanisms beyond internalization alone had been suggested by previous results (Ohkawa et al., 2014), showing a frequency reduction of IPSCs after GABAAR antibody application. Furthermore, our additional in vivo experiments using monovalent GABAAR Fab fragments not only replicated the severe mAb-induced phenotype but also supported the concept of direct effects of autoantibody–autoantigen binding, similar to recent studies in which polyclonal Fab fragment preparations of glycine receptor autoantibodies specifically reduced glycinergic currents (Crisp et al., 2019). In both cases, Fab fragment experiments prove mAb pathogenicity independent of the integrity of the whole antibody, thereby excluding the dependency of the antibody’s bivalence and Fc-mediated effector functions such as antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity, antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis, and complement-dependent cytotoxicity.
GABAAR encephalitis leads to frequent seizures, including epilepsia partialis continua and treatment-refractory status epilepticus (Petit-Pedrol et al., 2014; Spatola et al., 2017), which was the predominant phenotype also in our animal models. Future studies should compare whether the intrathecal application into rodents of polyclonal CSF from patients of a larger cohort induces similar effects. Here, using wireless EEG in living animals, we could quantify epileptiform activity. Ictal events peaked under the mAb delivery and remained until the end of the recording period, 14 d after termination of the infusion. Such persistence has not been observed in NMDAR encephalitis models, where cognitive changes were reversible after 10 d (Malviya et al., 2017; Planagumà et al., 2015). Extended measures revealed higher coastline length (Jones and Heinemann, 1988) and increased power in the lower frequency range (1–4 Hz), consistent with EEG changes in human encephalitis patients (Symmonds et al., 2018). Interestingly, in a pharmacologically induced rodent model of status epilepticus, spontaneous seizures were also associated with increased γ, θ, and Δ powers in the power spectrum, similar to our GABAAR mAb model (Puttachary et al., 2015).
Similar to our findings in the related NMDAR encephalitis (Kreye et al., 2016), we found a broad spectrum of CNS autoreactivity beyond GABAARs. These mAbs were reactive to surface and intracellular epitopes on neurons, endothelium, and choroid plexus. For example, we identified one anti–Homer-3 antibody, a known target protein in some patients with autoimmune cerebellitis and ataxia (Höftberger et al., 2013). Ongoing attempts to identify other auto-antigens using immunoprecipitation/mass spectrometry, phage display, and protein arrays followed by animal experiments with single mAbs or mAb combinations will likely disclose their relevance for additional functional effects, the clinical phenotype, and their potential as diagnostic markers. It is tempting to speculate that the diverse non-GABAAR reactivity against choroid plexus or blood vessels (e.g., mAb #113-201) may contribute to blood-brain barrier dysfunction and thus facilitate the entrance of further antibodies and immune cells into the CNS, similar to the role of glucose regulatory protein 78 autoantibodies in neuromyelitis optica (Shimizu et al., 2017).
The present study confirmed the importance of isolation and detailed characterization of disease-specific human mAbs from the CSF of patients with encephalitis to foster the comprehensive understanding of humoral CNS autoimmunity. Patient-derived recombinant mAbs represent a useful research tool for multiple purposes and thereby allow the detailed investigation of disease mechanisms and the translation into animal models to recapitulate the clinical phenotype. Most importantly though, retracing the molecular mechanisms of human antibody pathogenicity will provide a refined biological view on some important clinical conditions, such as isolated psychosis or catatonia, which can occur with GABAAR antibodies (Pettingill et al., 2015; Pollak et al., 2020). This knowledge will help to reduce the stigmatization associated with such psychiatric conditions by understanding them as autoimmune disorders that may require appropriate immunotherapy as a causative treatment in addition to antipsychotics or psychotherapy. Simultaneously, the mAbs are the starting point for the development of novel diagnostics and highly selective immunotherapies for the growing number of patients with antibody-mediated diseases.
Materials and methods
Patient sample handling
The index patients’ parents have given written informed consent, and analyses were approved by the Charité University Hospital Institutional Review Board.
4 ml of CSF was collected during the acute phase of encephalitis (Nikolaus et al., 2018) and immediately processed for cell pellet cryopreservation, therefore centrifuged for 10 min at 400× g, with supernatant stored at −80°C and the pellet resuspended in 500 µl of 10% dimethyl sulfoxide, 45% fetal calf serum, 45% RPMI medium before freezing at −80°C. PPE was collected 6 d after lumbar puncture and stored at −80°C.
We used fluorescence-activated cell sorting to isolate single CD138+ ASCs, CD20+CD27+ MBCs, and CD20+CD27− NMBCs from preselected viable CD3−CD14−CD16−DAPI− lymphocytes into 96-well PCR plates. The following antibodies were applied: anti–CD3-FITC (1:25; Miltenyi Biotec; #130-098-162), anti–CD14-FITC (1:25; Miltenyi Biotec; #130-098-063), anti–CD16-FITC (1:25; Miltenyi Biotec; #130-098-099), anti–CD20-PerCP-Vio700 (1:50; Miltenyi Biotec; #130-100-435), anti–CD27-APC-Vio770 (1:12.5; Miltenyi Biotec; #130-098-605), and anti–CD138-PE (1:50; Miltenyi; #130-098-122).
Generation of recombinant human mAbs
From single-cell cDNA Ig, genes encoding for variable domains of heavy and light chains were amplified, sequenced, and cloned into expression vectors containing the respective constant Ig domains. Sequence analysis data were confirmed by novel custom BASE software (Reincke et al., 2020). HEK cells (HEK293T) were transiently transfected with an Ig vector pair, mAb containing supernatant was harvested, and Ig concentrations were determined, all following our established protocols (Kornau et al., 2020; Kreye et al., 2016).
For reactivity screenings, supernatants were used if concentration was above 2 µg/ml. For detailed characterization of reactivity probabilities and functional assays, cell supernatants were purified using Protein G Sepharose beads, as described before (Kreye et al., 2016). For Fab fragment synthesis (inVivo BioTech), the IgG1 heavy chain vector was modified by the deletion of the part encoding for the Fc domains CH2 and CH3 in exchange for a FLAG-Tag and a His-Tag following the amino acids PKSCDKTH of the hinge region. Fab fragments were purified using immobilized metal affinity chromatography.
Primary neocortical cell cultures
Primary P0-P2 neocortical cultures were prepared from WT Wistar rats, as previously described (Turko et al., 2019). Briefly, dissected neocortex tissue was dissociated with Papain for 25 min (1.5 mg/ml; Merck) before trituration in BSA (10 mg/ml; Merck). Cells were then resuspended in Neurobasal A medium (supplemented with 1× B27, 1× Glutamax, and 100 U/ml Penicillin-Streptomycin; Thermo Fisher Scientific). Dissociated cells were grown in either 24-well or 6-well cell culture plates coated for 1 h with poly-L-lysine hydrobromide (20 µg/ml; Merck). For imaging with the luminescence plate reader, cells were plated in 500-µl droplets at 400 cells/µl (total: 2 × 105 cells per well of a 24-well plate). For Western blot analysis, cells were plated in 2-ml droplets at 500 cells/µl (total: 1 × 106 cells per well of a 6-well plate). Cultures were grown in humidified conditions at 37°C and 5% CO2. Cells were cultured until 20–22 d in vitro (DIV) before antibody treatment or fixation.
Immunohistochemistry
For reactivity screening, recombinant mAbs were stained on 20-µm sagittal unfixed mouse brain sections mounted on glass slides. After thawing, tissue was rinsed with PBS, and then blocking solution (PBS supplemented with 2% BSA [Roth] and 5% Normal Goat Serum [Abcam]) was applied for 1 h at room temperature. As primary antibodies, undiluted HEK293T cell supernatants containing recombinant mAbs were incubated overnight at 4°C. After washing three times with PBS, Alexa Fluor 488–conjugated goat anti-human IgG (1:1,000; Dianova; #109-545-003) diluted in blocking solution was added for 2 h at room temperature, before an additional three-time washing and mounting using DAPI-containing Fluoroshield.
For costainings (Fig. 1, B–E; and Fig. S2, A–D), purified recombinant human mAbs were used at 5 µg/ml, and tissue was fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA) and stained following the same protocol, but using blocking solution supplemented with 0.1% Triton X-100 (Chemsolute). For costainings, commercial antibodies rabbit anti–GABAAR α1 (1:250; Abcam; #ab33299), guinea pig anti-VGAT (1:500; Synaptic Systems; #131004), chicken anti-MAP2 (1:1,000; Thermo Fisher Scientific; #PA1-16751), rabbit anti-MAP2 (1:1,000; Merck; #AB5622), Alexa Fluor 568–conjugated goat anti-chicken IgG (1:500; Invitrogen; #AB_2534098), Alexa Fluor 647–conjugated goat anti–guinea pig IgG (1:1,000; Invitrogen; #A21450), and Alexa Fluor 594–conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG (1:1,000; Dianova; #111-585-003) were used, and stainings were examined under an inverted fluorescence microscope (Olympus CKX41, Leica DMI6000) or for confocal and large-scale tiling images taken with a cooled electron multiplying charge coupled device camera (Rolera-MGi PLUS, QImaging). For β-subunit stainings (Fig. S2, F–H), unfixed murine brain sections and the commercial antibodies guinea pig anti–GABAAR-β1 (1:500; Synaptic Systems; #224705), guinea pig anti–GABAAR-β2 (1:500; Synaptic Systems; #224805), and rabbit anti–GABAAR-β3 (1:500; Synaptic Systems; #224403) were used.
CBAs
HEK293T cells were cultured on poly-L-lysine–coated coverslips, transiently cotransfected with plasmids (kindly provided by Prof. Kneussel from the Center of Molecular Neurobiology in Hamburg, Germany) to express rat α1β3 or α1β3γ2 GABAAR, and 48 h later used for live-cell immunostainings following our described protocol, with reduced incubation time for primary antibodies to 1 h at room temperature followed by PFA fixation.
For neuronal live-cell stainings, DIV 20–22 live WT neocortical rat neurons were stained with human mAbs for 30 min in a cell culture incubator at 37°C and 5% CO2, then washed once before PFA fixation and secondary antibody application as above. For neuronal costainings, cultured neurons were washed and then first fixed with PFA, before application of blocking solution supplemented with 0.1% Triton X-100 for permeabilization followed by costaining procedures as described above.
GABAAR-negative mAbs with intense tissue reactivity were screened for established neural antigens using commercial panel tests (Euroimmun AG).
Polyreactivity ELISA
Antibodies were tested for polyreactivity by ELISA as previously described (Tiller et al., 2008; Wardemann et al., 2003). High-protein binding plates were coated overnight at room temperature with six distinct antigens: 10 µg/ml calf thymus double-stranded DNA (Sigma; #D8515), 10 µg/ml single-stranded DNA prepared from double-stranded DNA (heated at 95°C for 30 min, immediately aliquoted, and frozen at −20°C), 10 µg/ml LPS from Escherichia coli (Sigma; #L2637), 10 µg/ml KLH (Sigma; #H8283), 10 µg/ml Cardiolipin (Sigma; #C0563), and 5 µg/ml human insulin (Sigma; I9278). Plates were washed, then blocked with PBS supplemented with 0.05% Tween and 1 mM EDTA before addition of mAbs diluted in DMEM (GIBCO BRL; #31331093) supplemented with 1% Nutridoma-SP (Roche; #11011375001). Plates were developed with HRP-labeled goat anti-human IgG Fc antibody (1:5,000; Dianova; #109-035-098) and 1-Step Ultra TMB ELISA Substrate Solution (Thermo Fisher Scientific; #34029) and stopped with 2 M sulfuric acid. In all assays, strongly polyreactive ED38 (Meffre et al., 2004) and weakly polyreactive eiJB40 (Wardemann et al., 2003) were used as positive controls and mGO53 as a negative control. The threshold for positive binding was calculated for each antigen separately as the OD450 subtracted by two SDs of eiJB40.
GABAAR subunit reactivity screening
Cell-based binding assay for GABAAR was described previously (Ohkawa et al., 2014). In this study, we additionally cloned cDNAs of rat GABAAR α3 (NM_017069), α4 (NM_080587), and β2 (NM_012957) from rat brain total RNA by RT-PCR. COS7 cells were transfected with the indicated GABAAR subunits. At 24 h after transfection, the cells were fixed with 2% PFA at room temperature for 20 min and blocked with PBS containing 10 mg/ml BSA for 15 min. The fixed cells were incubated with patient-derived mAbs (5 µg/ml) followed by staining with the Cy3-conjugated secondary antibody. Then, the cells were permeabilized with 0.1% Triton X-100 for 10 min, blocked with PBS containing 10 mg/ml BSA, and incubated with antibodies to individual GABAAR subunits (underlined subunit in the illustration of Fig. 2 A), followed by staining with the Alexa Fluor 488–conjugated secondary antibody. We confirmed that any antibodies did not bind to untransfected cells that did not express the GABAAR subunits through distinguishing untransfected cells with Hoechst dye (33342; Thermo Fisher Scientific) nucleic acid staining. Images were captured with a system (LSM5 Exciter; Carl Zeiss) equipped with a Plan Apochromat 63×/1.40 numerical aperture oil immersion objective lens.
The antibodies used in this screening included rabbit polyclonal antibodies to GABAAR α2 (1:250; Rockland Immunochemicals, Inc.; #600-401-D45), α3 (1:250, extracellular epitope; Synaptic Systems; #224 303), α5 (1:250; Millipore; #AB9678), β3 (1:250; Abcam; #ab4046), and γ2 (1:250, extracellular epitope; Synaptic Systems; #224 003); guinea pig polyclonal antibodies to GABAA receptor β2 (1:250; Synaptic Systems; #224 805); and mouse mAbs to GABAA receptor α1 (1:250; NeuroMab; #75-136), β1 (1:250; NeuroMab; #75-137), and α4 (1:250; NeuroMab; #73–383).
The identities of human and rat GABAAR α1-, α2-, α3-, α4-, α5-, β1-, β2-, β3-, and γ2-subunits in their amino acid sequence are 100%, 97%, 95%, 89%, 93%, 98%, 99%, 97%, and 99%, respectively; that of the human and mouse γ2-subunit is 99%.
Quantification of relative binding strength on murine brain sections
Following the protocol above, serial dilutions of purified GABAAR mAbs from 50 to 0.002 µg/ml were used for staining of adjacent unfixed murine brain sections. Cerebellar images were recorded with identical settings and analyzed using ImageJ software, version 1.51n (developed by the National Institutes of Health). From each image, the MFI was determined from five random regions of interest (ROIs) within the granular cell layer, secondary antibody MFI was subtracted as background, and resulting MFI values were scaled to the average MFI values from all five GABAAR mAbs at 20 µg/ml (Wenke et al., 2019). Nonlinear regression models [MFI = MFImax * IgG concentration/(Half Max + IgG concentration)] under settings for one site-specific binding were generated using GraphPad Prism 8 (GraphPad Software Inc.).
Quantification of relative binding strength via flow cytometry
Following our established protocol (Ly et al., 2018), HEK293T cells were transiently cotransfected with plasmids encoding for rat or human α1-, β3-, and γ2-subunits of GABAAR and enhanced GFP (EGFP) or EGFP only and then stained with serial dilutions of purified mAbs. From live single cells with top 30% protein expression (evaluated by EGFP signal), the MFI of the Alexa Fluor 647–conjugated goat anti-human IgG (1:400; Life Technologies) was calculated, and nonlinear regression models were determined as above.
Competition assay
400 µg of purified GABAAR mAbs was concentrated to a volume of 100 µl using Amicon Ultra 100-kD columns (Merck) and then incubated with 40 µg CruzFluor 488 (CF488) succinimidyl ester (Santa Cruz Biotechnology) for 1 h under rotation in the dark. Unbound fluorophores were washed out using Amicon Ultra 100-kD columns. IgG concentrations were determined using an IgG ELISA. The degree of labeling (DOL) was calculated from spectrophotometer readings according to the manufacturer’s instructions and by using the following formula (with εIgG = 210,000 cm−1 M−1, εCF488 = cm−1 M−1, Correction Factor280 = 0.11):
(ATT Bioquest, 2021). The degrees of labeling obtained for the CF488-coupled mAbs were 10.9 for #113-101, 7.2 for #113-115, 10.8 for #113-175, and 17.5 for #113-198 and #113-201. CF488-coupled GABAAR mAbs were used in serial dilutions to stain unfixed mouse sections, and binding was quantified by MFI quantification of CF488 signals to determine individual concentrations for each mAb, yielding intensities between detection threshold and signal saturation. At these concentrations (0.4 µg/ml for #113-115, 4 µg/ml for all others), CF488-coupled mAbs were costained with uncoupled mAbs in excess at 50 µg/ml, and MFIs were quantified and compared with single-staining MFIs.
Quantification of surface protein expression from cultured neurons
To quantify expression of cell surface proteins, we performed state-of-the art biotinylation assays (Hughes et al., 2010; Ohkawa et al., 2014). In brief, DIV 20–22 rat neocortical neurons were treated with 5 µg/ml of GABAAR or control mAb in culture medium for 16–18 h. Neurons were washed, then incubated with EZ-Link Sulfo-NHS-SS-Biotin (Thermo Fisher Scientific) for 30 min at 4°C. After quenching unbound biotin, scratched neurons were lysed via sonification in RIPA buffer (150 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 100 mM Tris HCl, 1% Triton X-100, 1% sodium deoxycholate, and 0.1% SDS, pH 7.4, supplemented with protease inhibitor cocktail cOmplete Mini [Roche]) for 1 h at 4°C. Lysates were cleared of debris by centrifugation at 20,000× g for 20 min. The supernatant (whole protein fraction) was incubated with NeutrAvidin UltraLink beads (Thermo Fisher Scientific) for 3 h at 4°C, then eluted (surface proteins fraction). Samples were separated on an 8% gel using SDS-PAGE and analyzed by Western blotting. Images were recorded luminescence based on ImageQuant LAS 4000 mini and quantified using ImageQuant TL software (GE Healthcare; version 8.2).
For immunohistochemistry-based receptor quantification, we used DIV 20–22 rat neocortical neurons cultured in 24-well plates and applied identical mAb treatments as above. Neurons were stained as live cells with rabbit anti–GABAAR α1 antibody (1:1,000; Abcam; #ab33299), then washed and fixed with 4% PFA before application of IRDye 680RD goat anti-rabbit IgG secondary antibody (1:2,000; LI-COR; #925-68071) for 2 h at room temperature and a final washing with PBS. Plates were recorded in an Odyssey CLx Imaging System (LI-COR) under high-quality resolution settings and analyzed using Image Studio Ver. 5.2 (LI-COR). For each well from a 2,000-pixel–sized circular ROI, the total pixel intensities were summed, background signals from control wells without primary antibody were subtracted, and these values were scaled to the mean from all wells under the untreated condition of this plate.
Autaptic neurons and electrophysiological recordings
Autaptic murine striatal neurons (DIV 15–18) were selected for IPSC recordings as these provide a homogeneous composition of inhibitory neurons, although with the limitation of the lack of opportunity to measure excitatory postsynaptic currents as controls. Autapses were incubated with 1 µg/ml human GABAAR mAb or control antibody (anti-CD52; Bio-Rad; #HCA175) at 37°C for 24 h. Data collection from four independent cultures was performed as previously described (Zimmermann et al., 2015) with the following alterations. Cells were recorded in standard intra- and extracellular solutions, except for chemically induced NMDA responses, measured in extracellular solution containing 0 mM of Mg2+, 0.2 mM of CaCl2, and 10 µM of glycine. All drugs were bath applied for 1 s except for GABA, which was applied for 3 s. Currents were normalized per culture to the mean of untreated recordings.
Animals
All animal experiments were performed according to the ARRIVE guidelines and were approved by the Thuringian state authorities (authorization UKJ-17-053) and UK home office guidelines. Male C57BL/6 mice were used at an age of 13–14 wk and male Wistar rats at postnatal age of 21 d (weighing 50–58 g). Animals were housed in temperature- and humidity-controlled conditions on a 12-h/12-h dark/light cycle and provided with food and water ad libitum.
Intrathecal osmotic pump infusions
An investigator not involved in the animal experiments randomized mice for assignment to the respective treatment. Animals received mAb #113-115 either as IgG (high-dose group: 500 µg over 14 d, 1.5 µg/h, n = 7; low-dose group: 0.3 µg/h, n = 6) or as Fab fragment (equimolar [16.5 M] to 1.5 µg/h of IgG, n = 5) or control mAb mGO53 as IgG (1.5 µg/h, n = 5).
Cerebroventricular infusion with GABAAR mAb or control was performed using osmotic pumps (Alzet; model 1002), which were loaded the day before surgery. The following characteristics were used as previously reported (Petit-Pedrol et al., 2018; Planagumà et al., 2016): volume 100 µl, flow rate 0.25 µl/h, and duration 14 d. For surgery, mice were placed in a stereotaxic frame, and a bilateral cannula (PlasticsOne; model 3280PD-2.0/SP) was inserted into the ventricles (coordinates: 0.2 mm posterior and ±1.00 mm lateral from bregma, depth 2.2 mm). Each arm of the cannula was connected to one osmotic pump, which was subcutaneously implanted on the back of the mice (two pumps per animal). After surgery, mice were kept single caged and were monitored daily to assess symptoms and survival and were videotaped at representative time points. Mice were sacrificed at day 15. Brain tissue was obtained and frozen in 2-methylbutane.
Quantification of receptor expression from animals treated via osmotic pumps
For Western blot analysis, cryopreserved brain hemispheres from treated mice were thawed and dounced in homogenization buffer (1X PBS, 0.32 M Sucrose, 10 mM Hepes, pH 7.4, 2 mM EDTA, and 1.6 mM PMSF, supplemented with protease inhibitor cocktail cOmplete Mini). Samples were centrifuged at 1,000× g for 10 min. The supernatants (total cell fraction) were recentrifuged at 10,000× g for 15 min, and the obtained supernatant was finally ultracentrifuged at 100,000× g for 60 min. These pellets were suspended in sample buffer (membrane fraction), separated using SDS-PAGE, and analyzed by Western blotting as above.
Rat surgery: Placement of ventricular catheters, osmotic pumps, and wireless EEG transmitters
Osmotic pumps (Alzet; model 1007D) were used for cerebroventricular infusion of GABAAR mAbs (volume 100 µl, flow rate 0.5 µl/h, and duration 7 d). The day before surgery, two osmotic pumps per animal were prepared by loading with either one mAb or IgG derived from one healthy human aged 35 yr. As the initial dose of GABAAR #113-115 led to animal death through status epilepticus, applied amounts were reduced in subsequent animals, resulting in ranges from 40 to 120 µg human mAb (#113-115: n = 6, #113-175: n = 3, #mGO53: n = 4) or 6 mg of polyclonal human IgG (n = 2) per animal. The loaded pumps were then connected to polyethylene tubing 69-mm × 1.14-mm diameter (PlasticsOne; C312VT) and a double osmotic pump connector intraventricular cannula (PlasticsOne; 328OPD-3.0/SPC). Pumps were left overnight in sterile saline solution at 37°C. The next day, under isoflurane anesthesia, rats were placed in a stereotaxic frame for surgery. The osmotic pumps were placed subcutaneously, and the attached cannula was inserted into the lateral ventricles (1.5 mm lateral, 0.6 mm caudal). A subcutaneous pocket was formed over the right flank with a single skin incision and blunt tissue dissection for the transmitter (OpenSource Instruments [OSI]; A3028B-DD subcutaneous transmitters, 90-mm leads), and depth electrode (OSI; W-Electrode [SCE-W]) was placed in the left hippocampus (CA3, 3.5 mm lateral, 3.6 mm caudal, depth 2.3 mm) with reference electrode implanted in the contralateral skull (3.5 mm lateral, 3.6 mm caudal). The cannula and skull electrodes were secured with dental cement as previously described (Wright et al., 2015). Placement of catheters and electrodes was assessed postmortem during preparation of brain slices for electrophysiology and immunostaining.
Collection and analysis of EEG data
A custom-built Faraday cage with aerial was used to collect and record EEG data. Transmitter signals were continuously recorded in animals while freely moving using Neuroarchiver software (OSI) and analyzed as previously described (Wright et al., 2015; Wykes et al., 2012). In brief, the EEG coastline length was measured as the cumulative absolute difference in voltage between consecutive data points (Korn et al., 1987). For automated ictal event detection, video-EEG matching was used to identify ictal EEG events. The Event Classifier (OSI) was then used to classify 1-s segments of EEG according to several metrics, enabling similar events to cluster together when plotted according to metrics. This generated a library of ictal events that allowed fast identification of abnormal EEG events by automated comparison to the library (http://www.opensourceinstruments.com/Electronics/A3018/Seizure_Detection.html). Powerband analysis was performed using a custom-designed macro.
Behavioral tests
The PSBB was used to monitor long-term behavioral changes during and after the GABAAR antibody infusion (two tests were performed each week for the 3-wk recording period in n = 3 animals). The behavioral task consists of two simple and nonstressful tasks (i.e., touch and pickup tasks). If the product of these scores is >10, the animals are highly likely to have developed hyperexcitability and aggression; these measures strongly correlate with the development of spontaneous recurrent seizures (Modebadze et al., 2016).
Local field potential recordings
At the end of the recording period, 450-µm brain slices were prepared from the GABAAR and control mAb-infused rats and used for hippocampal local field potential recordings as previously described (Johnson et al., 2017; Modebadze et al., 2016). Local field potential recordings were assessed using Spike2 software (CED) for spontaneous epileptiform activity. Spike2 was used to calculate the root mean square amplitude of each recording. Epileptiform activity was classified as an event when it displayed amplitudes greater than fourfold the root mean square amplitude, providing the event count, while the time difference between these events provided the interevent interval. Measurements are expressed as median, interquartile range, and min-max values.
Statistical analysis
All statistical analyses were conducted using GraphPad Prism 8 (GraphPad Software Inc.). For sequence analysis, numbers of somatic hypermutations were compared using an ordinary one-way ANOVA test followed by post hoc Tukey's multiple comparisons tests. Amplitudes from autaptic neuron recordings were tested using Kruskal-Wallis, Dunn’s post hoc tests. Protein expression quantifications from Western blotting and immunohistochemistry data were analyzed with ordinary one-way ANOVA tests followed by post hoc Tukey’s multiple comparisons tests. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was analyzed by log-rank (Mantel-Cox) test followed by ANOVA with post hoc Tukey’s multiple comparisons tests. Coastline length measurements, ictal event counts, and power averages from in vivo EEG recordings and interevent intervals of spontaneous ictal activity from postmortem acute brain slice recordings were analyzed using Mann-Whitney tests.
Online supplemental material
Fig. S1 supplements Fig. 1 and shows the identification of GABAAR mAbs, their Ig sequence features, and polyreactivity data. Fig. S2 supplements Fig. 1 and shows further immunofluorescence stainings of patient-derived and commercial GABAAR mAbs on murine brain tissue. Fig. S3 supplements Fig. 2 and shows specificity and binding strength data of GABAAR mAbs. Fig. S4 supplements Fig. 3 and provides data from control experiments for the quantification of protein expression from cultured neurons treated with GABAAR mAbs. Fig. S5 supplements Fig. 4 and Fig. 5 and provides the characterization of GABAAR Fab #113-115 and animal data from prolonged EEG recordings and behavioral testing after cerebroventricular infusion of GABAAR mAbs. Table S1 presents sequence and reactivity data from GABAAR encephalitis CSF antibody repertoire. It lists Ig sequence features and reactivity characteristics for mAbs with corresponding identifier (mAb ID) isolated from CSF cells of different phenotypes, including ASCs, MBCs, and NMBCs. Table S2 shows regression models for GABAAR mAb binding to unfixed murine brain. Table S3 characterizes disease symptomatology in GABAAR encephalitis mouse model. Video 1 shows catatonia and epileptic seizures in mice after intrathecal infusion of GABAAR mAbs. Video 2 is a recording of a Racine stage 5 seizure in a rat after intrathecal infusion of GABAAR.
Data availability
Raw data were generated at the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE) Berlin, Charité University Medicine Berlin, Aston University Birmingham, University Hospital Jena, and National Institute for Physiological Sciences Okazaki. All relevant data supporting the key findings of this study are available within the article and its supplementary information files. The sequencing information for all mAbs from this manuscript, including raw data files and data derived from custom BASE software analysis, have been deposited to Code Ocean (https://doi.org/10.24433/CO.5442144.v1). The custom software BASE used for Ig sequence analysis is available at https://github.com/automatedSequencing/BASE.
Acknowledgments
We thank Doreen Brandl, Matthias Sillmann, and Stefanie Bandura (DZNE, Berlin, Germany) for excellent technical assistance and Rob Wykes, Jonathan Cornford, and Andrea Lieb (University College London, UK) for use of the electroencephalography powerband analysis program.
This work was supported by the German Research Foundation (SFB1315 to A.M. Kaindl; FOR3004 to A.M. Kaindl, C. Geis, and H. Prüss; GE2519/8-1 and GE2519/9-1 to C. Geis; EXC2049 to D. Schmitz; PR 1274/2-1, PR 1274/3-1, and PR 1274/5-1 to H. Prüss), by the Helmholtz Association (HIL-A03 to H. Prüss), by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (Connect-Generate 01GM1908D to H. Prüss and 01GM1908B to C. Geis), by a BIH-Charité Junior Clinician Scientist Fellowship funded by Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin and the Berlin Institute of Health (to J. Kreye and S. Momsen Reincke), by the Academy of Medical Sciences (SBF004\1053 to D.R. Dhangar), by an Epilepsy Research UK Fellowship and Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Career Development Fellowship (to S.K. Wright), by the Schilling foundation (to C. Geis), the Interdisciplinary Center of Clinical Research of the Medical Faculty Jena (to J. Wickel), Japan Society for the Promotion of Science/Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology KAKENHI (19H03331, 19K22439 to Y. Fukata; 20H00459, 19K22548 to M. Fukata), DAIKO Foundation (to Y. Fukata), and the Hori Sciences and Arts Foundation (to M. Fukata). This research was funded in whole or in part by Wellcome Trust. For the purpose of Open Access, the author has applied a CC-BY public copyright license to any Author Accepted Manuscript (AAM) version arising from this submission.
Author contributions: J. Kreye, S.K. Wright, and H. Prüss designed the study. J. Kreye, S.K. Wright, A. van Casteren, L. Stöffler, M.-L. Machule, M. Nikolaus, S. van Hoof, E. Sanchez-Sendin, M.A. Homeyer, C. Cordero Gómez, M.A. Wilson, M.A. Upadhya, D.R. Dhangar, S. Greenhill, P. Turko, J. Wickel, Y. Fukata, and M. Fukata acquired data. J. Kreye, S.K. Wright, A. van Casteren, L. Stöffler, M.-L. Machule, S. Momsen Reincke, M. Nikolaus, H.-C. Kornau, D. Schmitz, A.M. Kaindl, P. Boehm-Sturm., S. Mueller, M.A. Wilson, S. Greenhill, G. Woodhall, P. Turko, I. Vida, C.C. Garner, J. Wickel, C. Geis, Y. Fukata, M. Fukata, and H. Prüss analyzed and interpreted data. J. Kreye, S.K. Wright, and H. Prüss drafted the manuscript. All authors have critically revised and approved the submitted version.
References
Competing Interests
Disclosures: No disclosures were reported.