Acute neuronal cell death and neuroinflammation per se do not trigger secondary autoimmune encephalitis in mice
Justus Wilke, Antonios Ntolkeras, Vinicius Daguano Gastaldi, Kathrin Borowski, Bianca Teegen, Winfried Stöcker, Fred Lühder, Klaus-Armin Nave, Hannelore Ehrenreich

TL;DR
This study shows that acute brain cell death and inflammation in mice do not lead to autoimmune encephalitis, even though some autoantibodies were detected.
Contribution
The study challenges the hypothesis that neuronal damage and neuroinflammation alone trigger autoimmune encephalitis.
Findings
Acute neuronal death and neuroinflammation in mice did not result in autoimmune encephalitis symptoms.
Autoantibodies against brain antigens were rarely detected in mice with encephalitis.
Lymphocyte infiltration and microgliosis were present but did not progress into autoimmune responses.
Abstract
Patients with virus encephalitis, such as herpes simplex encephalitis and Japanese encephalitis frequently relapse with autoimmune encephalitides associated with neural autoantibodies. It has been hypothesized that the infection-induced damage to the central nervous system results in shedding of neural autoantigens, their presentation to the peripheral immune system, and initiation of a secondary autoimmune encephalitis that targets these autoantigens. To test this hypothesis, we utilized a transgenic mouse model of virus-like but sterile encephalitis. After induction of acute neuronal death in the hippocampus, we monitored the mice for encephalitis-like symptoms for up to 10 months, evaluated the degree of neuroinflammation at several time points and screened their plasma for autoantibodies against 49 different autoimmune disease-associated brain autoantibodies. Throughout the study…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAutoimmune Neurological Disorders and Treatments · Peripheral Neuropathies and Disorders · Neuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration Mechanisms
