Aglycosylated extracellular loop of inwardly rectifying potassium channel 4.1 (KCNJ10) provides a target for autoimmune neuroinflammation

Author:

Nicot Arnaud B1ORCID,Harb Jean1,Garcia Alexandra1ORCID,Guillot Flora1,Mai Hoa-Le1,Mathé Camille V1,Morille Jérémy1ORCID,Vallino Amélie1,Dugast Emilie1,Shah Sita P1,Lefrère Fabienne23,Moyon Mélinda23,Wiertlewski Sandrine123,Le Berre Ludmilla1,Renaudin Karine1,Soulillou Jean-Paul1,van Pesch Vincent4,Brouard Sophie1,Berthelot Laureline1,Laplaud David-Axel123

Affiliation:

1. INSERM, Nantes Université, CHU Nantes, Center for Research in Transplantation and Translational Immunology (CR2TI) , UMR 1064, Nantes 44000 , France

2. Service de Neurologie, CHU Nantes , Nantes 44000 , France

3. CIC Inserm 1413, CHU Nantes , Nantes 44000 , France

4. Neurologie, Institute of Neuroscience, Université Catholique de Louvain , Bruxelles 1200 , Belgium

Abstract

AbstractMultiple sclerosis is an autoimmune disease of the central nervous system. Yet, the autoimmune targets are still undefined. The extracellular e1 sequence of KCNJ10, the inwardly rectifying potassium channel 4.1, has been subject to fierce debate for its role as a candidate autoantigen in multiple sclerosis. Inwardly rectifying potassium channel 4.1 is expressed in the central nervous system but also in peripheral tissues, raising concerns about the central nervous system-specificity of such autoreactivity. Immunization of C57Bl6/J female mice with the e1 peptide (amino acids 83–120 of Kir4.1) induced anti-e1 immunoglobulin G- and T-cell responses and promoted demyelinating encephalomyelitis with B cell central nervous system enrichment in leptomeninges and T cells/macrophages in central nervous system parenchyma from forebrain to spinal cord, mostly in the white matter. Within our cohort of multiple sclerosis patients (n = 252), 6% exhibited high anti-e1 immunoglobulin G levels in serum as compared to 0.7% in the control cohort (n = 127; P = 0.015). Immunolabelling of inwardly rectifying potassium channel 4.1-expressing white matter glia with the anti-e1 serum from immunized mice increased during murine autoimmune neuroinflammation and in multiple sclerosis white matter as compared with controls. Strikingly, the mouse and human anti-e1 sera labelled astrocytoma cells when N-glycosylation was blocked with tunicamycin. Western blot confirmed that neuroinflammation induces Kir4.1 expression, including its shorter aglycosylated form in murine experimental autoencephalomyelitis and multiple sclerosis. In addition, recognition of inwardly rectifying potassium channel 4.1 using mouse anti-e1 serum in Western blot experiments under unreduced conditions or in cells transfected with the N-glycosylation defective N104Q mutant as compared to the wild type further suggests that autoantibodies target an e1 conformational epitope in its aglycosylated form. These data highlight the e1 sequence of inwardly rectifying potassium channel 4.1 as a valid central nervous system autoantigen with a disease/tissue-specific post-translational antigen modification as potential contributor to autoimmunity in some multiple sclerosis patients.

Funder

Region Pays de la Loire, Inserm, Fondation Sclérose en plaques

Antares Association

Labex IGO

French National Research Agency

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Biological Psychiatry,Psychiatry and Mental health

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