Functional monovalency amplifies the pathogenicity of anti-MuSK IgG4 in myasthenia gravis

Author:

Vergoossen Dana L. E.ORCID,Plomp Jaap J.ORCID,Gstöttner ChristophORCID,Fillié-Grijpma Yvonne E.ORCID,Augustinus RoyORCID,Verpalen RobynORCID,Wuhrer Manfred,Parren Paul W. H. I.ORCID,Dominguez-Vega ElenaORCID,van der Maarel Silvère M.ORCID,Verschuuren Jan J.,Huijbers Maartje G.

Abstract

Human immunoglobulin (Ig) G4 usually displays antiinflammatory activity, and observations of IgG4 autoantibodies causing severe autoimmune disorders are therefore poorly understood. In blood, IgG4 naturally engages in a stochastic process termed “Fab-arm exchange” in which unrelated IgG4s exchange half-molecules continuously. The resulting IgG4 antibodies are composed of two different binding sites, thereby acquiring monovalent binding and inability to cross-link for each antigen recognized. Here, we demonstrate that this process amplifies autoantibody pathogenicity in a classic IgG4-mediated autoimmune disease: muscle-specific kinase (MuSK) myasthenia gravis. In mice, monovalent anti-MuSK IgG4s caused rapid and severe myasthenic muscle weakness, whereas the same antibodies in their parental bivalent form were less potent or did not induce a phenotype. Mechanistically this could be explained by opposing effects on MuSK signaling. Isotype switching to IgG4 in an autoimmune response thereby may be a critical step in the development of disease. Our study establishes functional monovalency as a pathogenic mechanism in IgG4-mediated autoimmune disease and potentially other disorders.

Funder

Leiden University Medical Center

Top Sector Life Sciences & Health to Samenwerkende Gezondheidsfondsen

Prinses Beatrix Spierfonds

Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

European Commission

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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