Documents
-
- Download
- Title page_Table of contents
- open access
-
- Download
- Chapter 2
- open access
- Full text at publishers site
-
- Download
- Chapter 3
- open access
- Full text at publishers site
-
- Download
- Chapter 4
- open access
- Full text at publishers site
-
- Download
- Chapter 5
- open access
- Full text at publishers site
-
- Download
- Propositions
- open access
In Collections
This item can be found in the following collections:
The pathophysiology of MuSK myasthenia gravis
Muscle-specific kinase (MuSK) myasthenia gravis (MG) is a neuromuscular autoimmune
disease that is hallmarked by fatigable muscle weakness of in particular the cranial
and bulbar muscles. The disease is caused by auto-antibodies binding MuSK on the post-synaptic muscle membrane. MuSK orchestrates formation, differentiation and maintenance of neuromuscular synapses. The research outlined in this thesis aimed at identifying the pathomechanism of MuSK MG. In passive transfer studies with immune incompetent mice we showed that IgG4 subclass antibodies from these patients exclusively induced myasthenia. We furthermore showed that anti-MuSK IgG4 causes the disease by inhibiting MuSK-Lrp4 interaction which results in loss of acetylcholine receptor clustering and synaptic disassembly. Our retrospective longitudinal study in 53 patients from three different cohorts identified the N-terminal Ig-like domain of MuSK as the main immunogenic region of the protein and showed...
Show moreMuscle-specific kinase (MuSK) myasthenia gravis (MG) is a neuromuscular autoimmune
disease that is hallmarked by fatigable muscle weakness of in particular the cranial
and bulbar muscles. The disease is caused by auto-antibodies binding MuSK on the post-synaptic muscle membrane. MuSK orchestrates formation, differentiation and maintenance of neuromuscular synapses. The research outlined in this thesis aimed at identifying the pathomechanism of MuSK MG. In passive transfer studies with immune incompetent mice we showed that IgG4 subclass antibodies from these patients exclusively induced myasthenia. We furthermore showed that anti-MuSK IgG4 causes the disease by inhibiting MuSK-Lrp4 interaction which results in loss of acetylcholine receptor clustering and synaptic disassembly. Our retrospective longitudinal study in 53 patients from three different cohorts identified the N-terminal Ig-like domain of MuSK as the main immunogenic region of the protein and showed that titers against this domain correlate with disease severity. Epitope patterns did not correlate with sensitivity to acetylcholine esterase inhibitors. Lastly we observed that, next to MuSK MG, 12 other antibody-mediated autoimmune diseases are hallmarked by predominant involvement of IgG4 antibodies. As IgG4 antibody-mediated autoimmune diseases differ in several aspects from other autoimmune disease they might form a new niche in antibody-mediated autoimmune diseases
Show less- All authors
- Huijbers, M.G.M.
- Supervisor
- Verschuuren, J.J.G.M.; Maarel, S.M. van der
- Co-supervisor
- Plomp, J.J.
- Committee
- Burden, S.J.; Yazdanbakhsh, M.; Wokke, J.H.J.
- Qualification
- Doctor (dr.)
- Awarding Institution
- Medicine , Leiden University
- Date
- 2016-07-06
- ISBN (print)
- 9789461826817