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Bystander mechanism for complement-initiated early oligodendrocyte injury in neuromyelitis optica

Tradtrantip, L., Yao, X., Su, T. et al. Acta Neuropathol (2017). doi:10.1007/s00401-017-1734-6

Lukmanee Tradtrantip, Xiaoming Yao, Tao Su, Alex J. Smith, Alan S. Verkman

Abstract

Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (herein called NMO) is an autoimmune inflammatory disease of the central nervous system in which immunoglobulin G antibodies against astrocyte water channel aquaporin-4 (AQP4-IgG) cause demyelination and neurological deficit. Injury to oligodendrocytes, which do not express AQP4, links the initiating pathogenic event of AQP4-IgG binding to astrocyte AQP4 to demyelination. Here, we report evidence for a complement ‘bystander mechanism’ to account for early oligodendrocyte injury in NMO in which activated, soluble complement proteins following AQP4-IgG binding to astrocyte AQP4 result in deposition of the complement membrane attack complex (MAC) on nearby oligodendrocytes. Primary cocultures of rat astrocytes and mature oligodendrocytes exposed to AQP4-IgG and complement showed early death of oligodendrocytes in close contact with astrocytes, which was not seen in pure oligodendrocyte cultures, in cocultures exposed to AQP4-IgG and C6-depleted serum, or when astrocytes were damaged by a complement-independent mechanism. Astrocyte-oligodendrocyte cocultures exposed to AQP4-IgG and complement showed prominent MAC deposition on oligodendrocytes in contact with astrocytes, whereas C1q, the initiating protein in the classical complement pathway, and C3d, a component of the alternative complement pathway, were deposited only on astrocytes. Early oligodendrocyte injury with MAC deposition was also found in rat brain following intracerebral injection of AQP4-IgG, complement and a fixable dead-cell stain. These results support a novel complement bystander mechanism for early oligodendrocyte injury and demyelination in NMO.