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Molecular disease mechanisms of human antineuronal monoclonal autoantibodies

Sophie L. Duong, Harald Prüß

2022Trends in Molecular Medicine21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Autoantibodies targeting brain antigens can mediate a wide range of neurological symptoms ranging from epileptic seizures to psychosis to dementia. Although earlier experimental work indicated that autoantibodies can be directly pathogenic, detailed studies on disease mechanisms, biophysical autoantibody properties, and target interactions were hampered by the availability of human material and the paucity of monospecific disease-related autoantibodies. The emerging generation of patient-derived monoclonal autoantibodies (mAbs) provides a novel platform for the detailed characterization of immunobiology and autoantibody pathogenicity in vitro and in animal models. This Feature Review focuses on recent advances in mAb generation and discusses their potential as powerful scientific tools for high-resolution imaging, antigenic target identification, atomic-level structural analyses, and the development of antibody-selective immunotherapies.

Topics & Concepts

AutoantibodyMonoclonal antibodyDiseaseAntigenImmunologyMonoclonalMedicineBiologyAntibodyNeuroscienceComputational biologyPathologyAutoimmune Neurological Disorders and TreatmentsMonoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies ResearchRNA and protein synthesis mechanisms
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