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The Journal of Neuroscience, January 1, 2002, 22(1):123-132
Anti-S-Nitrosocysteine Antibodies Are a Predictive
Marker for Demyelination in Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis:
Implications for Multiple Sclerosis
Anne I.
Boullerne1, 3,
José J.
Rodríguez2,
Tarik
Touil3,
Bruno
Brochet3,
Stephan
Schmidt4,
Nora D.
Abrous2,
Michel
Le
Moal2,
Jeffrey R.
Pua1,
Mark A.
Jensen1,
Willy
Mayo2,
Barry G. W.
Arnason1, and
Klaus G.
Petry3
1 Department of Neurology, University of Chicago,
Chicago, Illinois 60637, 2 Institut National de la
Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, Unité 259, and
3 Laboratory of Neurobiologie des Affections de la
Myéline EA2966, Victor Segalen Bordeaux II University, 33076 Bordeaux, France, and 4 Department of Neurology, University
of Bonn, 53105 Bonn, Germany
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ABSTRACT |
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is characterized by inflammation within the
CNS. This inflammatory response is associated with production of nitric
oxide (NO) and NO-related species that nitrosylate thiols. We
postulated that MS patients would exhibit an antibody (Ab) response
directed against proteins containing S-nitrosocysteine (SNO-cysteine) and showed that anti-NO-cysteine Abs of the IgM isotype
are in fact present in the sera of some MS patients (Boullerne et al.,
1995 ). We report here the presence of a seemingly identical Ab response
directed against SNO-cysteine in an acute model of MS, experimental
autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) induced in Lewis rats with the
68-84 peptide of guinea pig myelin basic protein (MBP68-84). Serum levels of anti-SNO-cysteine Abs peaked 1 week before the onset of clinical signs and well before the appearance
of anti-MBP68-84 Abs. The anti-SNO-cysteine Ab peak titer
correlated with the extent of subsequent CNS demyelination, suggesting
a link between Ab level and CNS lesion formation. In relapsing-remitting MS patients, we found elevated anti-SNO-cysteine Ab at times of relapse and normal values in most patients judged to be
in remission. Two-thirds of patients with secondary progressive MS had
elevated anti-SNO-cysteine Ab levels, including those receiving interferon -1b. The data show that a rise in circulating
anti-SNO-cysteine Ab levels precedes onset of EAE. Anti-SNO-cysteine
Abs are also elevated at times of MS attacks and in progressive
disease, suggesting a possible role for these Abs, measurable in blood,
as a biological marker for clinical activity.
Key words:
experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis; multiple
sclerosis; autoimmunity; nitric oxide; antibody; clinical marker
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INTRODUCTION |
Multiple sclerosis (MS), the most
common inflammatory demyelinating disease of the CNS, usually begins as
a relapsing-remitting process. As one attack follows another,
disability accumulates, and usually the illness eventually becomes
relentlessly progressive (Noseworthy, 1999 ). An easily measured
biological marker that predicts MS activity would be desirable. None is
known, except possibly soluble adhesion molecules (Rieckmann et al.,
1998 ; Trojano et al., 1998 ), caspase mRNA expression (Furlan et al.,
1999 ), and T-cell activation markers (Khoury et al., 2000 ).
Nonspecific inflammatory reactants, proposed as contributors to tissue
damage in MS, include nitric oxide (NO). NO triggers axon and
oligodendrocyte degeneration; both are targets in MS lesions (Boullerne
et al., 2001 ; Smith et al., 2001 ). NO is volatile, so its production is
usually measured indirectly by evaluation of NO synthases or NO-derived
products such as nitrosated amino acids, nitrite, and nitrate.
Increased nitrite level in CSF of MS patients correlates with clinical
activity (Brundin et al., 1999 ; Svenningsson et al., 1999 ). In active
MS lesions, microglia and macrophages express inducible NO synthase
(iNOS; Hooper et al., 1997 ), and macrophages isolated from an active MS
lesion were shown to produce NO (De Groot et al., 1997 ). Similarly,
blood monocytes produce substantial amounts of NO when MS is active (Sarchielli et al., 1997 ). In experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), an animal model for MS, iNOS mRNA expression within the CNS is
enhanced both at onset and peak of clinical signs, with levels
returning to normal on remission (Koprowski et al., 1993 ; Okuda et al.,
1995 ). All the above suggests a relationship between NO production and
CNS inflammation.
NO covalently modifies proteins. For example, nitrotyrosine, generated
when tyrosine is nitrated by NO-related species, has been detected in
MS and EAE lesions (Hooper et al., 1997 ; Cross et al., 1998 ).
Similarly, cysteine can be nitrosated by NO and NO-related species
(Hess et al., 2001 ), and new epitopes of possible relevance to MS can
be generated. We have shown previously that antibodies (Abs) reactive
with nitroso-S-cysteine coupled to the protein carrier
bovine serum albumin (BSA) are elevated in sera from MS patients
compared with sera from healthy controls (Boullerne et al., 1995 ),
suggesting that anti-SNO-cysteine Abs might constitute a biological
marker in MS and possibly a predictor of onset and severity of EAE.
We coupled S-nitrosocysteine (SNO-cysteine) to BSA and
measured serum levels of anti-SNO-cysteine Ab over the course of
actively induced EAE in Lewis rats. We show that an
anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA Ab response of the M isotype peaks 6-7 d
postimmunization (dpi), i.e., several days before EAE onset, and that
titers at this early time point correlate with the extent of subsequent
demyelination. We also show that levels of serum anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA
Ab are elevated in MS at times of relapse but normal in most patients judged to be in remission. Two-thirds of patients with progressive MS
have elevated anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA Abs, including patients receiving
interferon -1b (IFN -1b). Anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA Abs may
serve as biological markers for disease activity in MS.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Induction and clinical evaluation of EAE.
Female Lewis rats aged 6-10 weeks weighing 145-180 gm were obtained
from Charles River France SA. Animal handling conformed to guidelines
of the European Community. Each rat received 100 µg of the
encephalitogenic 68-84 peptide of guinea pig myelin basic protein
(MBP68-84, Y68GSLPQKSQ76R79SQDEN84;
Peninsula Laboratories, Belmont, CA) in 50 µl of PBS
emulsified with 50 µl of complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA; Difco
Laboratories, Detroit, MI) enriched with 1 mg of heat-inactivated Mycobacterium tuberculosis strain H37 RA (Difco; Mannie et
al., 1985 ). The mixture was injected at 50 µl/hind footpad. The total dose of M. tuberculosis received per rat was 1.05 mg: 50 µg in the CFA plus 1 mg of supplement.
In the first experiment, the EAE group comprised seven rats aged 6-7
weeks. The control group was composed of five rats that received 50 µl/hind footpad PBS emulsified in 50 µl of CFA alone, i.e., a total
dose of 50 mg of M. tuberculosis/rat. In a second experiment, nine rats aged 9-10 weeks were immunized for EAE following the protocol given above. Controls again consisted of five rats injected with PBS-CFA alone.
A clinical score was assigned daily for 35 d after immunization.
The clinical score was graded as 0, no clinical signs; 1, flaccid tail;
2, flaccid tail and hindlimb paresis; and 3, hindlimb paralysis. EAE
onset was defined as the day a rat developed a flaccid tail. A
cumulative disease severity score (Liedtke et al., 1998 ) was generated
for each rat, summing the daily scores from 11 to 20 dpi, because
recovery began on day 19 in the first experiment and on day 21 in the
second experiment.
Detection of rat anti-SNO-cysteine antibodies. Tail blood
was sampled every 7-9 d. Sera were tested by ELISA for specific Abs
directed against SNO-cysteine linked to a BSA carrier via treatment
with 0.25% glutaraldehyde for 5 min (SNO-cysteine-BSA) as described
previously (Boullerne et al., 1995 ). For ELISA, 96-well polystyrene
plates (Maxisorp; Nunc, Roskilde, Denmark) were coated overnight with
SNO-cysteine-BSA (or BSA treated with glutaraldehyde alone, BSA-g, as a
control), at a concentration of 10 µg/ml in 0.05 M
carbonate buffer, pH 9.6. Free binding sites were blocked by incubation
for 1 hr at 37°C with PBS containing 0.05% Tween 20 (PBS-Tween) plus
10% glycerol and 0.1% BSA (buffer A). After rinsing twice with
PBS-Tween, rat sera diluted 1:500 in buffer A were added in duplicate
and incubated for 2 hr at 37°C. After two rinses with PBS-Tween,
plates were incubated with peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-rat IgM
(M-chain-specific; Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA) or with goat
anti-rat IgG (heavy and light chain-specific; Jackson
ImmunoResearch) both diluted to 0.12 µg/ml in PBS-Tween plus 0.1%
BSA for 1 hr at 37°C. After three rinses with PBS-Tween, reactivity
was revealed with orthophenylenediamine (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) as
chromogen. Optical density (OD) was read at 490 nm in a plate reader
(MR 5000; Dynatech Laboratories, Ashford, UK). The
anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA titer was calculated by subtracting the OD read
on BSA-g (blank) from the OD read on SNO-cysteine-BSA.
Specificity of IgM binding to immobilized SNO-cysteine-BSA was assessed
by adding SNO-cysteine-BSA to the liquid phase and measuring
inhibition. A 7 dpi rat serum sample chosen for its high Ab titer was
preincubated at a dilution of 1:500 with
10 10-10 5
M SNO-cysteine-BSA in buffer A for 16 hr at 4°C. After
centrifugation at 10,000 × g for 30 min, supernatants
were tested in ELISA with SNO-cysteine-BSA coated on 96-well plates to
determine whether SNO-cysteine-BSA in liquid phase inhibited IgM
binding to SNO-cysteine-BSA adsorbed on plates in proportion to its concentration.
Detection of rat anti-myelin basic protein antibodies. Abs
directed against MBP68-84 were assayed as
described above for anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA Abs but with plates coated
with MBP68-84 at 0.5 µg/ml and with rat sera
diluted 1:1,000. Each serum was tested in duplicate in two independent
experiments for Abs to SNO-cysteine-BSA and to
MBP68-84 peptide, and the four OD values were
averaged to give a mean Ab titer. Within-plate OD variation was 5-6%;
between-plate OD variation was ±26%.
Determination of demyelination. The extent of myelin
depletion was determined in cerebellar and C1-C6 cervical spinal cord white matter at 35 dpi. Animals were deeply anesthetized with chloral
hydrate (400 mg/kg, i.p.) and perfused transcardially with 150 ml of
PBS containing 5 × 104 IU/ml
heparin, followed by 500 ml of 4% paraformaldehyde dissolved in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.4. Brain and spinal cord were removed and immersed in 4% paraformaldehyde for 24 hr at 4°C. C1-C6
cervical spinal cord and cerebellum blocks were washed in 0.1 M phosphate buffer for 2 hr at 4°C and then incubated in
a 30% sucrose solution in 0.1 M phosphate buffer overnight
at 4°C for cryoprotection. Samples were stored at 80°C until
processing. Sagittal cerebellum sections of 30 µm were cut using a
cryostat (HM500M; Microm). Cerebellum sections were immunostained for
MBP to evaluate myelin depletion according to a procedure adapted from
Vandenbark et al. (1986) . Free-floating adjacent sections of cerebellum
were incubated overnight with polyclonal rabbit Ab against MBP diluted
at 1:20,000 (kindly provided by Dr. A. Fournier, Victor Segalen
University). Sections were then incubated with a biotin-labeled goat
anti-rabbit Ab diluted at 1:200 (Dako SA, Trappes, France).
Immunoreactivity was visualized by the biotin-streptavidin technique
using 3,3'-diaminobenzidine as chromogen (avidin-biotin complex
kit; Dako) and incubation for 10 min. Negative controls were performed
by omitting the primary Ab and by using Abs unrelated to CNS antigens.
The mean staining intensity per defined square surface was measured
using a densitometer system (Samba 2640; Alcatel) and expressed in
arbitrary units of OD. For each section, MBP labeling was measured in
the inner part of the granular layer within three different lobes.
Blank values were obtained from the molecular layer of the cerebellum,
known to contain primarily unmyelinated fibers. The average value of
MBP staining per animal was calculated by measuring the mean value of
four sections within lobes 4, 6, and 8 and then subtracting the mean of
blank values.
Eleven series of five transverse cervical spinal cord sections (C1-C6)
of 30 µm were cut using a cryostat (HM500M). The first section of
each series (thus 150 µm apart) was stained for myelin by
Spielmeyer's method as described previously (De Castro and Ramon y
Cajal, 1933 ). Myelin appears black after staining by Spielmeyer's method. Free-floating sections were incubated in 2.5% ammonium iron
(III) sulfate aqueous solution, washed in water, and stained with
hematoxylin. To evaluate the amount of myelin loss in white matter on
stained sections, an image analysis system (NIH Image running on an
Apple Macintosh computer) coupled to a microscope (Nikon, Tokyo, Japan)
was used to measure the area of lesion (clear) and the total area of
white matter on four to six sections of each animal. Total length of
cervical spinal cord examined was 600-900 µm. The percentage of
myelin loss was calculated by dividing the lesion size into the total
area of white matter for each section.
Determination of inflammation. From the same series of
cervical spinal cord cross sections (C1-C6), the second section of each series (again 150 µm apart) was stained with hematoxylin and
eosin. Infiltrations were observed perivascularly, within the
parenchyma and in the meninges. An inflammatory index was calculated by
averaging the total number of infiltration sites per section. The size
of individual infiltration sites was weighted by a factor of 1-3 to
reflect the intensity of the pathology. The maximum number of
infiltration sites was 5 per section. Five to 11 sections were analyzed
for each of nine animals. The total length of cervical spinal cord
examined was 750-1650 µm.
Patients. Venous blood was obtained from 6 French MS
patients and from 25 American MS patients. All patients gave informed consent, and the protocol was in conformity with French law and had the
approval of the University of Chicago Institutional Review Board. Half
the American MS patients were being treated with IFN -1b. All
patients were classified as having definite MS according to the
criteria of Poser et al. (1983) and were subclassified into five
subgroups: (1) acute relapse, defined as an abrupt neurological deterioration lasting for >24 hr; no patient in relapse was receiving IFN -1b; (2, 3) remission, in which sera from relapsing-remitting MS
patients in remission were subdivided into those receiving IFN -1b
(2) and those who were untreated (3); and (4, 5) secondary progressive
MS, in which all patients had evident neurological deterioration that
had been evolving for >6 months and were classified as treated with
IFN -1b (4) or untreated (5).
Control sera were from 5 French and 19 American healthy volunteers.
Titers of human anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA IgM were determined blind
according to a procedure described previously (Boullerne et al., 1995 ).
The method was as outlined above for the EAE experiments, except that
serum or plasma was diluted 1:300, and Ab was revealed with
peroxidase-conjugated rabbit anti-human IgM (M-chain-specific; Dako,
Carpinteria, CA) diluted at 1:1000. The average OD of each healthy
donor group was used to determine the relative OD of serum or plasma of
each MS patient according to the following calculation: relative
OD = ODpatient mean ODhealthy
group/mean ODhealthy group.
To detect any difference in anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA Ab level between
serum and plasma of the same individuals, several paired samples from
MS patients and controls were tested within the same assay. No
difference in relative OD was detected. For this reason, either serum
or plasma titers were measured in individual subjects.
Specificity of IgM to SNO-cysteine-BSA. Specificity of IgM
binding to immobilized SNO-cysteine-BSA was assessed by adding SNO-cysteine-BSA or competitors to the liquid phase and measuring binding inhibition. Six MS sera chosen for their high Ab titer were
preincubated at dilutions of 1:300 and 1:450 with competitors at
concentrations of
10 10-10 5
M in buffer A for 16 hr at 4°C. After centrifugation at
10,000 × g for 30 min or at 12,000 × g for 13 min, supernatants were tested by ELISA with
SNO-cysteine-BSA coated on 96-well plates to determine whether
SNO-cysteine-BSA or any competitor added to the liquid phase
interfered, in proportion to its concentration, with IgM binding to
SNO-cysteine-BSA adsorbed on plates. Competitors tested included
cysteine-BSA (a homolog of SNO-cysteine-BSA) and SNO-cysteine-BSA
preincubated with 2 mM
HgCl2 (Sigma) in 0.3× PBS, pH 7.4, for 4 hr at
4°C, according to a previously described method (Saville, 1958 ), to
destroy nitrosylation. After centrifugation, the supernatant was
recovered, assayed for protein content, and incubated with MS sera.
Additional competitors included BSA-g nitrosylated by incubation with
NaNO2 (Sigma) in 0.5 M HCl (NO-BSA-g)
as described for SNO-cysteine-BSA (Boullerne et al., 1995 ),
cysteine-BSA incubated with the NO donor
S-nitroso-N-acetyl-D,L-penicillamine
(SNAP) (Sigma) at 27 mM for 4 hr at 37°C at pH
7-8, cysteine-BSA incubated with the peroxynitrite donor
3-morpholino-sydnonimine (SIN-1) (Sigma) at 29 mM
for 4 hr at 37°C, and cysteine-BSA incubated with
H2O2 (Fisher Scientific,
Pittsburgh, PA) at 88 mM for 4 hr at 37°C. These
competitors, once prepared, were dialyzed for 24 hr at 4°C in 0.01 M Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.4, followed by 2 washes with 0.1× PBS.
Western blot of nitrosylated proteins. Western blots were
performed in 10% acrylamide SDS-PAGE with SDS at a concentration of
0.2% in the sample buffer and at 0.02% in the gel. Blots were performed at 4°C to preserve nitrosylation. Nitrosylated proteins loaded on gel were the following: (1) SNO-cysteine-BSA, (2) NO-BSA-g, (3) SNO-cysteine-BSA treated with 10 mM dithiothreitol
(DTT, Sigma) for 2 hr at 4°C, (4) NO-BSA-g treated with 10 mM DTT, and (5) SNO-cysteine-BSA treated with 2 mM HgCl2 (as described above). Nitrosylated proteins were transferred onto Immobilon P membrane (Millipore, Bedford, MA). MS serum was added at a dilution of 1:300 in
PBS-Tween 20 containing 0.1% BSA buffer, and incubation was continued
overnight at 4°C. After three rinses with PBS, peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-human IgM (Sanofi Diagnostics Pasteur) diluted 1:1,000 in
Tris-buffered saline, pH 7.4 (TBS), was added for 2 hr at room temperature. After three rinses with TBS, reactivity was revealed with
4-chloro-1-naphtol (Sigma) as chromogen.
Paired CSF-sera. Venous blood and CSF were obtained
concomitantly from 25 German MS patients not subclassified into
subgroups. The CSF was obtained for diagnostic purposes. All patients
gave informed consent, and the protocol was in conformity with German law. All patients were classified as having definite MS according to
the criteria of Poser et al. (1983) . Sera were tested at a dilution of
1:400, and CSF was tested at a dilution of 1:2 to allow for the low IgM
content in CSF. Both sera and CSF were preincubated with SorboTech (a
generous gift from Genzyme Virotech, Ruesselsheim, Germany) for 15 min
at room temperature before incubation onto the plate to remove all
human IgG including rheumatoid factor (IgG antibody to IgM) that might
give a false-positive OD. Titers of human anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA IgM
were determined blind in paired sera and CSF on the same plate
according to the method outlined previously.
Nitrite and nitrate measurements. SNO-cysteine-BSA was
tested for nitrite and nitrate content by Griess assay at various times after preparation. The procedure was adapted from that of Drulovic et
al. (2001) . Briefly, samples were incubated with nitrate reductase from
Aspergillus (EC 1.6.6.2), reduced NADPH, and FAD
for 2 hr at 37°C to convert nitrate into nitrite. Excess NADPH was oxidized by adding lactic dehydrogenase from rabbit muscle (EC 1.1.1.27) plus pyruvate (all reagents from Sigma) and incubated for 30 min at 37°C. Samples were assayed before and after nitrate reduction
to measure nitrite and combined nitrite and nitrate levels,
respectively. The Griess assay was performed in microplates by mixing
samples with the Griess reagent, comprising a 1:1 mixture of 0.15%
naphthylethylenediamine and 1.5% sulfanilamide in 1N HCl and
incubating for 5 min at room temperature. Absorbance was read at 562 nm
in a microplate reader. The nitrite concentration was calculated from a
NaNO2 standard curve, and complete conversion of
nitrate into nitrite was confirmed by including a standard curve of
NaNO3 in each test. For samples containing DTT,
standard curves of nitrite and nitrate were prepared with DTT at the
same concentration. Values of samples processed through nitrate
reduction were corrected for the residual level of nitrate present in
water by subtracting the background OD.
Purification of serum immunoglobulins. Crude immunoglobulin
preparations were obtained from sera of four MS patients in relapse and
four healthy donors by precipitation (v/v) with a saturated solution of
ammonium sulfate (Merck, Darmstadt, Germany). After 10 dialyses in PBS
at 4°C to wash away ammonium sulfate, IgM fractions were purified by
exclusion chromatography on a Sephadex G-200 gel filtration column
(Amersham Biosciences, Freiburg, Germany). All immunoglobulin fractions
were tested at 25 µg/ml for their anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA Ab titer of
IgM isotype as described previously (Boullerne et al., 1995 ).
Statistical analyses. Serum and plasma Ab titers of rats and
of MS patients were subjected to one-way ANOVA followed by a post
hoc analysis using the Newman-Keuls multiple-comparison test. Values of MBP content in cerebellum were compared with the unpaired t test. The Spearman correlation, chosen because some data
were not Gaussian, was used to correlate titers of
anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA and anti-MBP68-84 Abs,
cumulative disease scores, inflammation in spinal cord, and
demyelination in spinal cord and cerebellum.
 |
RESULTS |
Circulating anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA antibodies in EAE
In the first experiment, all rats developed EAE. The time course
of the clinical scores showed a biphasic pattern (Fig.
1A). The mean onset of
the first episode occurred at 12.6 dpi, although one rat showed
extremely early clinical signs with a score of 3 at 6 dpi. Mean
clinical signs peaked at 17 dpi, with an average clinical score of
2.0 ± 0.577 (mean ± SD). Recovery was almost complete at 23 dpi, with an average clinical score of 0.43 ± 0.79. A second
clinical episode occurred in four of seven rats with a mean onset at 28 dpi. Relapses lasted for 1 week, followed by complete recovery. All
seven rats were killed after a 6-month observation period. No CNS
pathological analysis was performed.

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Figure 1.
First series of experiments on young rats aged
6-7 weeks (n = 7). A, Biphasic
pattern of clinical course of EAE in 6- to 7-week-old rats. Clinical
scores were graded daily for the scores 0-3 over a 35 d
follow-up. Daily average clinical scores are plotted (mean ± SD).
B, Serum anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA IgM titers peak 1 week
after immunization in rats induced for EAE. Values are expressed as
mean OD ± SEM of Ab titers. Anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA IgM titers in
sera from EAE rats (open bars) were significantly
elevated at 7 dpi when compared with other time points
(***p < 0.001). IgG titers (closed
bars) rose less than IgM titers but were nonetheless elevated
at 7 dpi compared with other time points (*p < 0.05). No rise of anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA IgM was observed in the control
group immunized with CFA alone (shaded bars).
C, IgM binding to immobilized SNO-cysteine-BSA is
inhibited by SNO-cysteine-BSA in liquid phase (competitor) in a
dose-dependent manner, indicating specific binding of IgM to
SNO-cysteine-BSA. Each plot is the mean OD ± SEM
of two independent experiments each performed in duplicate.
D, Serum Ab response against MBP68-84
peptide in rats with EAE. Values are expressed as mean OD ± SEM
of Ab titers obtained from two independent analyses each in duplicate.
Anti-MBP68-84 IgM titers (open bars) were
significantly elevated at 14 and 21 dpi when compared with other time
points (*p < 0.05). Anti-MBP68-84 IgG
titers (closed bars) were significantly elevated at 21 and 30 dpi (*p < 0.05).
|
|
A 10-fold increase above baseline in the IgM response to
SNO-cysteine-BSA was observed at 7 dpi. The average OD of sera sampled at 7 dpi was 0.779 ± 0.163 (mean ± SEM; range,
0.332-1.296) compared with 0.081 ± 0.013 (range, 0.044-0.125;
p < 0.001, post hoc analysis) on the day
before immunization (Fig. 1B). The IgM response at 14, 21, and 30 d was twofold to threefold elevated compared with baseline. The 7 d value was significantly greater than at later time points (p < 0.001, post hoc
analysis). Animals that relapsed showed a higher Ab titer at 7 dpi
(1.024 ± 0.211, n = 4) than animals with a single
episode (0.452 ± 0.070, n = 3) although no
secondary rise in Ab response on day 21 preceded relapses.
The specificity of IgM binding to SNO-cysteine-BSA was demonstrated by
an inhibition experiment using various concentrations of
SNO-cysteine-BSA in the liquid phase. This showed displacement of Ab
binding proportional to the amount of SNO-cysteine-BSA added (Fig.
1C).
The IgG response to the SNO-cysteine-BSA epitope, although less
dramatic than the IgM response, also peaked at 7 dpi (Fig. 1B). IgG titers were threefold elevated at 7 dpi
(0.288 ± 0.073; range, 0.090-0.543) when compared with baseline
(0.064 ± 0.017; range, 0.028-0.150; p < 0.05, post hoc analysis). IgG titers decayed subsequently. The
control group immunized with CFA alone showed neither clinical signs
nor an Ab response to SNO-cysteine-BSA (Fig. 1B).
Anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA antibodies precede anti-MBP antibodies
Serum levels of anti-MBP68-84 IgM were
significantly increased at 14 and 21 dpi in the EAE group when compared
with other time points (p < 0.05, post
hoc analysis). Anti-MBP68-84 IgG levels
were significantly increased at 21 and 30 dpi (p < 0.05, post hoc analysis), as illustrated in Figure
1D. No Ab response directed against
MBP68-84 was observed in the control group immunized with CFA alone (data not shown).
Clinical signs and anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA antibodies
In the second EAE experiment, using rats aged 9-10 weeks, mean
disease onset occurred at 15.7 dpi, 3 d later than in the first experiment. Disease was milder, as expected for older rats, with an
average clinical score of 1.0 ± 1.0 (mean ± SD). There was no second episode (Fig.
2A). Again, serum
levels of anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA IgM at 6 dpi in the EAE group
(n = 9) were significantly greater than at baseline
(average OD, 0.492 ± 0.052; range, 0.315-0.720; vs average OD
before immunization, 0.087 ± 0.008; range, 0.060-0.130; p < 0.001, post hoc analysis). Values were
lower than in the first experiment in which disease was more severe. As
in the previous study, anti-SNO-cysteine IgM peaked 1 week after
immunization (Fig. 2B).

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Figure 2.
Second series of experiments on older rats aged
9-10 weeks (n = 9). A, Monophasic
pattern of clinical course of EAE in 9- to 10-week-old rats showing a
milder disease. Clinical scores were graded daily for the scores 0-3
over a 35 d follow-up. Daily average clinical scores are plotted
(mean ± SD). B, Anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA IgM titers
in sera from EAE rats (open bars) were significantly
elevated at 6 dpi when compared with other time points
(***p < 0.001). No rise of anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA
IgM was observed in the control group immunized with CFA alone at 6 dpi
(shaded bars). Values are expressed as mean OD ± SEM of Ab titers obtained from two independent analyses each in
duplicate. C, Anti-MBP68-84 IgG titers
(open bars) were significantly elevated at 30 dpi when
compared with other time points (***p < 0.001). No
rise of anti-MBP68-84 IgG titers was observed in the
control group immunized with CFA alone at any time (shaded
bars). Values are expressed as mean OD ± SEM of Ab titers
obtained from two independent analyses each in duplicate.
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Again, serum levels of anti-MBP68-84 IgG at 30 dpi in the EAE group (n = 9) were significantly greater
than at baseline (average OD, 0.463 ± 0.083; range, 0.100-0.910;
vs average OD before immunization, 0.088 ± 0.004; range,
0.070-0.105; p < 0.001, post hoc analysis)
but were lower than in the first experiment in which disease was more
severe (Fig. 2C).
To determine whether individual values for anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA or
anti-MBP68-84 Ab titers correlated with
subsequent clinical severity, we compared the cumulative scores of all
rats (n = 16) from the two experiments with their Ab
titers. There was no correlation between anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA Ab
levels at any time point and cumulative clinical severity scores, nor
did anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA Ab titers correlate with
MBP68-84 Ab titers. There was no correlation
between MBP68-84 Ab titers at any time point and
cumulative clinical severity scores.
Correlation among demyelination, inflammation, and
anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA antibodies
The extent of demyelination at 35 dpi, evaluated in the cervical
spinal cord by Spielmeyer staining in EAE rats of the second experiment, varied substantially from rat to rat (Fig.
3). A direct relationship was found
between the level of anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA Abs at 6 dpi and the extent
of demyelination in the spinal cord (Spearman r = 0.93;
p = 0.0007; n = 9; Fig.
4A) and between the level of anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA Abs at 6 dpi and the extent of inflammation in the spinal cord (r = 0.85;
p = 0.006; n = 9; Fig. 4B).

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Figure 3.
Demyelination in cervical spinal cord (C1-C6)
assessed by Spielmeyer staining at 35 dpi varies from one rat to
another. The ring of white matter is stained in black by
Spielmeyer, whereas the central gray matter appears gray
because of the combined hematoxylin coloration. A control rat immunized
with CFA alone shows no myelin loss (A), whereas
rats with EAE show mild demyelination (B),
moderate demyelination (C), or extensive
demyelination (D).
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Figure 4.
Anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA IgM titers at 6 dpi
correlate with subsequent demyelination and inflammation in spinal cord
and cerebellum in rats with EAE of the second experiment
(n = 9). Values of Ab titers are expressed as mean
OD of two independent experiments in duplicate. A,
Demyelination was assessed by Spielmeyer staining of C1-C6 spinal cord
sections at 35 dpi, and demyelination values are expressed as
percentage of myelin loss. A direct relationship was found between
demyelination and anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA IgM titers for sera of EAE rats
at 6 dpi (closed squares) with Spearman coefficient
r = 0.93 (p = 0.0007).
B, Inflammation was assessed by hematoxylin and eosin
staining of C1-C6 spinal cord sections at 35 dpi, and values of
inflammation are expressed as an inflammation index. A direct
relationship was found between inflammation and anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA
IgM titers for sera of rats with EAE at 6 dpi (closed squares) with
Spearman coefficient r = 0.85 (p = 0.006). C,
Anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA IgM titers at 6 dpi correlate with subsequent
demyelination of cerebellum at 35 dpi in rats with EAE assessed by MBP
content. Values of MBP content are expressed as mean OD (arbitrary
units). A direct inverse relationship was found between MBP content and
anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA IgM titers for sera of rats with EAE at 6 dpi
(closed squares) with Spearman coefficient
r = 0.82 (p = 0.011).
D, Demyelination assessed by Spielmeyer staining in
C1-C6 spinal cord sections correlates with demyelination of cerebellum
assessed by MBP content at 35 dpi for rats with EAE (closed
squares). A direct inverse relationship was found, with
Spearman coefficient r = 0.87
(p = 0.0045).
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The extent of myelin depletion in the cerebellum, as evaluated by
quantitative immunostaining for MBP, revealed a 28% decrease in the
EAE group (8.04 ± 0.52, mean ± SEM; n = 9)
compared with control rats (11.12 ± 1.28; n = 5;
p = 0.02, t test). A direct relationship was
found between the level of anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA Abs at 6 dpi and
subsequent MBP depletion in cerebellum (r = 0.82; p = 0.011; n = 9; Fig. 4C).
There was a strong correlation between demyelination in spinal cord and
in cerebellum in EAE rats (r = 0.87;
p = 0.0045; n = 9; Fig.
4D). No correlation was found between
anti-MBP68-84 Abs at any time point and CNS
demyelination or inflammation at 35 dpi.
Anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA antibodies in MS
Ab titers directed against SNO-cysteine-BSA varied with clinical
activity (Fig. 5). Ab titers were of IgM
isotype as noted previously (Boullerne et al., 1995 ). Ab titers are
graphed as relative OD to permit for pooling of experiments using
different groups of healthy controls and MS patients. All eight samples from six MS patients in relapse (one patient was studied during three
relapses) showed significantly elevated titers of anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA IgM (1.879 ± 0.285, mean ± SEM; n = 8),
when compared with healthy controls (0.00 ± 0.092;
n = 19; p < 0.001) and with both MS
groups in remission, one group treated with IFN -1b (0.139 ± 0.224; n = 7; p < 0.01; one patient
studied twice was negative on both occasions) and the other group
untreated (0.521 ± 0.238; n = 11; p < 0.05; one patient studied on four occasions was
positive twice, and another was negative on two occasions).

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Figure 5.
Anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA IgM Abs are elevated during
clinical activity in MS patients when compared with healthy controls
(group 1; closed squares; n = 19).
The ordinate gives relative optical density (see
Materials and Methods). Secondary progressive MS patients were divided
into an untreated group (group 2; open triangles;
n = 14) and a group treated with IFN -1b (group
3; closed triangles; n = 9).
Relapsing-remitting MS patients were classified into patients in acute
relapse and untreated (group 4; open diamonds;
n = 8) and in remission and receiving IFN -1b
treatment (group 5; closed circles;
n = 7) or in remission without treatment (group 6;
open circles; n = 11). Relative ODs
were significantly elevated in some MS groups: group 1 versus groups 2 and 4 (p < 0.001) and versus group 3 (p < 0.05); group 2 versus groups 5 (p < 0.001) and 6 (p < 0.01); and group 4 versus groups 5 (p < 0.01) and 6 (p < 0.05).
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Two-thirds of secondary progressive MS patient samples (SPMS) showed
elevated titers of anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA IgM whether treated with
IFN -1b (1.107 ± 0.396; n = 9) or untreated
(1.847 ± 0.375; n = 14). These elevations were
significant when compared with the control group (untreated SPMS,
p < 0.001; IFN -treated SPMS, p < 0.05) and with the two groups in remission (untreated SPMS vs
IFN -treated patients in remission, p < 0.001;
untreated SPMS vs untreated patients in remission, p < 0.01). Four untreated SPMS patients were studied serially, one on five
occasions (patient A), one on three occasions (patient B), and two
others twice (patients C and D). Eleven of 14 samples (79%) were
positive, including 5 of 5 samples of patient A, 3 of 3 samples of
patient B, 1 of 2 samples of patient C, and 0 of 2 samples of patient
D. Eight SPMS patients receiving IFN were studied; one patient was
studied twice. Five of 9 samples (55%) were positive, including both
from the patient studied twice.
Because a correlation was found in sera of MS patients (but not in
healthy donors) between total IgM levels and anti-SNO-cysteine IgM
titers in our previous study (Boullerne et al., 1995 ), we attempted to
rule out a nonspecific increase in anti-SNO-cysteine Ab simply
attributable to IgM hyperglobulinemia. We measured anti-SNO-cysteine Ab
titers in IgM purified from sera of four MS patients in relapse and
from four healthy donors, all at the same protein concentration. A
marked increase of anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA Ab titer was found in IgM
purified from MS sera compared with IgM purified from healthy donor
sera (Fig. 6).

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Figure 6.
Anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA IgM Abs are enriched in the
IgM of MS patients. Immunoglobulin fractions were tested at a protein
concentration of 25 µg/ml. Anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA IgM is elevated in
total IgM purified from the serum of an MS patient during relapse on a
gel filtration column (closed squares) compared with a
healthy donor (open squares). The mean of two
independent experiments in duplicate is plotted. MS and control sera
representative of four MS and four healthy donor sera tested are
shown.
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Specificity of anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA antibodies in MS
To characterize the specificity of circulating IgM toward the
nitrosylated cysteine residue linked to the BSA carrier by a five-carbon chain (glutaraldehyde linking), binding inhibition experiments were performed. First, sera from three MS patients were
incubated with the following competitors: SNO-cysteine-BSA, SNO-cysteine-BSA treated with HgCl2 to abolish
nitrosylation, and cysteine-BSA (a homolog for SNO-cysteine-BSA).
Binding of MS serum IgM to SNO-cysteine-BSA absorbed on plates was
inhibited by 50% (IC50) after exposure to 4 × 10 7 M soluble
SNO-cysteine-BSA (Fig. 7A).
HgCl2-treated SNO-cysteine-BSA inhibited binding
poorly, as did cysteine-BSA, showing that nitrosylation is essential
for binding of IgM to SNO-cysteine-BSA.

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Figure 7.
MS sera are specific for the SNO-cysteine
epitope. IgM binding to immobilized SNO-cysteine-BSA is inhibited by a
competitor in the liquid phase in a dose-dependent manner. Binding
inhibition is calculated by dividing OD of each competitor
concentration by OD without competitor (ODo). A,
Specific binding of IgM to immobilized SNO-cysteine-BSA (closed
squares) with IC50 at 4 × 10 7 M. Absence of nitrosylation, i.e.,
with cysteine-BSA (open squares) or SNO-cysteine-BSA
treated with HgCl2 (closed circles),
prevented IgM binding inhibition. Each plot is the
average OD ± SD of three sera tested in two independent
experiments, each performed in duplicate. B, Specific
binding of IgM to immobilized SNO-cysteine-BSA (closed
squares) with IC50 at 2 × 10 8 M. Conformational modifications of
the BSA carrier induced by acidic nitrosylation (NO-BSA-g; open
circles) or cysteine-BSA treated with HCl treatment
(open squares) or of cysteine-BSA nitrosylated by SNAP
(stars) did not abolish binding. Each
plot is the average OD ± SD of three other sera
tested in two independent experiments, each performed in duplicate.
C, Other oxidative modifications of cysteine-BSA induced
by the peroxynitrite donor SIN-1 (closed diamonds) or by
hydrogen peroxide (closed circles) did not inhibit IgM
binding to immobilized SNO-cysteine-BSA (closed
squares). Each plot is the average OD of one
serum tested in two independent experiments, each performed in
duplicate.
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Additional inhibition experiments were performed using sera from 3 additional MS patients and the following competitors: SNO-cysteine-BSA, cysteine-BSA treated with HCl (a control for acidic nitrosylation by
NaNO2), cysteine-BSA
treated with the NO donor SNAP, cysteine-BSA treated with the
peroxynitrite donor SIN-1, cysteine-BSA treated with
H2O2, and BSA-g
nitrosylated by NaNO2 (NO-BSA-g). Again, the
strongest avidity was observed for SNO-cysteine-BSA, with an
IC50 of 2 × 10 8 M (Fig.
7B,C). The other competitors failed to inhibit binding at
>50%, even at 10 5
M. The findings indicate a high degree of
specific binding to SNO-cysteine-BSA for circulating IgM from MS patients.
One MS serum was blotted on the following nitrosylated molecules:
SNO-cysteine-BSA, NO-BSA-g, DTT-treated SNO-cysteine-BSA, DTT-treated
NO-BSA-g, and HgCl2-treated SNO-cysteine-BSA.
Western Blots were performed under low SDS conditions to preserve
nitrosylation. Preferential binding to SNO-cysteine-BSA was observed
(Fig. 8). Some staining was observed
after treatment of SNO-cysteine-BSA with DTT (2 hr at 4°C), but only
faint staining remained after treatment of SNO-cysteine-BSA with
HgCl2, the most efficient treatment for
destroying nitrosylation. NO-BSA-g was not stained. Again, binding of
serum IgM to nitrosylated cysteine residues linked to BSA with
glutaraldehyde was highly selective.

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Figure 8.
Western blot of one MS serum on various
nitrosylated antigens showed specificity for SNO-cysteine-BSA. Proteins
were loaded at 6 µg/lane. SNO-cysteine-BSA (lane 1)
was well stained; NO-BSA-g (lane 2) and DTT-treated
NO-BSA-g (lane 4) were not recognized;
DTT-treated SNO-cysteine-BSA (lane 3) was stained; and
HgCl2-treated SNO-cysteine-BSA (lane 5) was
stained faintly.
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Stability of SNO-cysteine-BSA
Because nitrosylated compounds are often labile, we examined the
stability of nitrosylated SNO-cysteine-BSA kept at room temperature and
exposed to light over 15 d. We used two methods to evaluate nitrosylation. We assessed nitrosylation directly by scanning a
solution of SNO-cysteine-BSA (1.26 mg/ml in 0.1× PBS) from 240 to 500 nm and recording the OD at 400 nm (OD400), the
peak of absorbance of nitrosylation. A 35% decrease of
OD400 was observed after a 24 hr exposure to room
temperature and light (OD decreased from 0.270 to 0.176).
OD400 decreased further to 0.135 over the following 14 d. After complete denitrosylation (accomplished by incubation with 10 mM DTT at room temperature for 3 d), OD400 was at background values. The above
indicates that there was an ~50% loss of detectable nitrosylation
over 2 weeks at room temperature.
We also used the Griess assay to measure nitrite and nitrate release
from the SNO-cysteine-BSA solution described above. An increase of
released nitrite and nitrate was observed over a 13 d exposure to
room temperature and to light, increasing from 30 µM at
day 1 to 49 µM at day 13 (Fig.
9). In contrast, complete denitrosylation
followed incubation with 10 mM DTT for 3 d at room
temperature and resulted in release of 154 µM nitrite and nitrate, close to the maximal expected value of 159 µM.
Treatment with 10 mM DTT for 2 hr resulted in only partial
release of nitrite and nitrate, in keeping with the Ab binding observed
in blotting experiments when SNO-cysteine-BSA was treated for 2 hr with
10 mM DTT at 4°C (Fig. 8). Collectively, these
observations indicate that nitrosylation of SNO-cysteine-BSA is
adequately conserved during the 1-2 d interval required to coat the
ELISA plates and perform the assay.

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Figure 9.
Time course study of nitrite and nitrate release
from SNO-cysteine-BSA on exposure to light and room temperature.
Nitrate was enzymatically reduced into nitrite before evaluation by
Griess assay. Nitrite levels (open bars) and combined
nitrite and nitrate levels (NO ; shaded
bars) released from an SNO-cysteine-BSA solution rose slowly
from day 1 to day 13 (13 d). Incubation of SNO-cysteine-BSA with 10 mM DTT for 2 hr on day 22 (22 d) markedly increased nitrite
and nitrate levels. After 3 d exposure to 10 mM DTT
(25d), complete denitrosylation was achieved. Nitrite or nitrate levels
were not detected at any time point in the cysteine-BSA control.
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Origin of anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA antibodies in MS
To assess the origin of anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA antibodies in MS, we
tested pairs of CSF and sera from MS patients. Circulating anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA antibody titers were elevated in 10 of 25 sera.
Anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA antibodies were detected in only one CSF. The OD
in this sample CSF diluted 1:2 was 0.207, and in the serum diluted
1:400 it was 0.219. We conclude that anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA antibody
does not originate in the CNS.
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DISCUSSION |
We report an Ab response against an uncommon epitope,
SNO-cysteine-BSA, in sera from Lewis rats with actively induced EAE. A
similar Ab response is identified in MS. Titers of IgM Abs to SNO-cysteine-BSA did not correlate with the severity of clinical disease in EAE but did correlate with the extent of demyelination measured after clinical recovery, suggesting a possible role for anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA Abs in the demyelinative process.
A concern related to the stability of SNO-cysteine-BSA. The compound
was shown to be stable over time. Generation of SNO-cysteine-BSA introduces conformational changes to the carrier protein BSA; therefore, it became important to establish that the epitope recognized was indeed nitrosylated cysteine. During the first step of
SNO-cysteine-BSA generation, cysteine is linked to BSA by
glutaraldehyde. This step would be expected to cross-link BSA itself.
During the second step, chemical nitrosylation of cysteine might
additionally nitrosylate tyrosine residues of the BSA carrier, possibly
creating nitrotyrosine. We excluded an Ab response against
glutaraldehyde-treated BSA and against BSA nitrosylated directly.
Western blots failed to show binding of IgM to the modified BSA
carriers. These negative results were reinforced by the failure of
glutaraldehyde-treated BSA and nitrosylated BSA to inhibit IgM binding
to SNO-cysteine-BSA bound to ELISA plates.
Another concern was that the Ab response might have been directed
against some other oxidation product derived from the linked cysteine.
Inhibition experiments established that the IgM response was specific
for SNO-cysteine-BSA. The above supports the idea that the epitope
recognized on SNO-cysteine-BSA conjugates is the nitrosylated cysteine moiety.
Our finding of anti-SNO-cysteine Abs provides evidence for the
formation in vivo of S-nitroso complexes and for
the development of Abs directed against new epitopes generated by
NO-related species-mediated nitrosylation. NO-related species-mediated
new epitope formation accounts for the finding of nitrotyrosine on
proteins in CNS lesions both in MS and in active EAE (Hooper et al.,
1997 ; Cross et al., 1998 ). Unlike nitrotyrosine in the CNS, the
anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA Abs documented herein in blood peaked well before
the onset of clinical signs or CNS inflammation, suggesting a potential
role for them as a predictor of subsequent disease activity.
The anti-SNO-cysteine Abs must be directed against a peripherally
expressed epitope. We found IgM anti-SNO-cysteine Abs in the CSF in
only 1 of 25 MS cases, arguing strongly against a CNS origin for these
Abs, at least in humans. Levels of the NO-derived products nitrite and
nitrate increase in the plasma within 24 hr of immunization with MBP in
rats (Cowden et al., 1998 ; O'Brien et al., 1999 ), indicating brisk
early peripheral NO production and by extension prompt epitope
expression. In contrast, iNOS mRNA in the CNS was first detected 4 d before disease onset in rodents immunized with MBP (Koprowski et al.,
1993 ; Okuda et al., 1995 ). The peripheral origin of anti-SNO-cysteine
IgM Abs is further supported by their detection in sera of rats with
adjuvant arthritis and no CNS inflammation, albeit at a lower intensity
than in rats with EAE (A. I. Boullerne, unpublished observations).
Adjuvant arthritis is preceded by early production of NO, raised plasma levels of nitrite and nitrate, and elevated iNOS expression in the
spleen (Fletcher et al., 1998 ). All of these appear preclinically, just
as in EAE.
A second component of the humoral immune response, driven by MBP
itself, was observed. IgM Abs directed against the
MBP68-84 peptide peaked 2-3 weeks after
immunization, as found previously in rats immunized with
MBP68-84 peptide or with MBP (Kibler et al.,
1977 ; Fesel and Coutinho, 1998 ). Note that the anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA IgM response peaked well before the anti-MBP IgM response, suggesting that the former was a natural Ab response (Avrameas and Ternynck, 1993 ). An IgG response against SNO-cysteine-BSA also occurred conjointly with the IgM response but was less intense, as has been
reported previously for natural auto-Abs (Matsiota-Bernard et al.,
1993 ). The early conjoint appearance of anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA IgM and
IgG is typical for a natural Ab response known to be both early and
chiefly of the IgM isotype, with lesser IgG isotype representation. In
mice immunized with bacteria, natural Abs to DNA and to tubulin peak
well ahead of specific antibacterial Abs (Matsiota-Bernard et al.,
1993 ), in keeping with the time courses of anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA Abs
and anti-MBP Abs observed here.
Anti-MBP68-84 Abs did not correlate with
cumulative clinical signs in this study, as in numerous previous
studies in EAE. Anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA antibodies similarly did not
correlate with cumulative clinical signs but did correlate with
demyelination and inflammation.
The role of circulating anti-SNO-cysteine Abs in EAE remains unknown.
This stated, the correlation of anti-SNO-cysteine Abs at day 6 with
subsequent demyelination argues against an epiphenomenon. Demyelination
occurs in the EAE model that we used and has been noted by others using
similar immunization protocols within the same CNS areas studied by us
(Pender, 1987 ; Chalk et al., 1994 ). Anti-SNO-cysteine Abs may
contribute to demyelination, provided that they reach the CNS and that
cysteine residues on CNS proteins are nitrosylated during inflammation
within the CNS. Abs in the blood can reach the CNS parenchyma if there
is a breakdown of the blood-brain barrier (BBB). They can also be
actively transported by brain endothelial cells. IgM has been found
within vesicles in endothelial cells within MS lesions, providing
evidence for active transport of circulating IgM across the BBB (Gay
and Esiri, 1991 ). As an example of circulating Ab-mediated central
demyelination, we note that peripherally injected monoclonal Abs
directed against myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein trigger
demyelination in Lewis rats in which EAE has been adoptively
transferred with MBP-activated T-cells (Linington et al., 1988 ;
Piddlesden et al., 1993 ).
Alternatively, a protective role can be envisaged for anti-SNO-cysteine
IgM over the longer term. Ab-facilitated clearance of damaged myelin
may favor subsequent remyelination. Germ line rodent and human
("natural") IgM Abs promote remyelination within the CNS in the Theiler's virus-induced murine model of demyelination (Asakura et al., 1998 ; Warrington et al., 2000 ). The Abs
recognize various oligodendrocyte antigens, including MBP, the human
natural killer-1 epitope, galactocerebroside, and sulfatide. In
mice with adoptively transferred EAE, treatment with a germ line
IgM Ab that recognizes an uncharacterized
oligodendrocyte surface antigen lessens both CNS inflammation and
demyelination (Miller et al., 1997 ).
Our MS patients were classified as having relapsing-remitting MS
(RRMS) in relapse, RRMS deemed stable clinically, and SPMS. All 8 samples obtained during relapses had elevated SNO-cysteine-BSA Ab
titers. In the untreated group of stable RRMS patients, 5 of 11 samples
were positive. Only 1 of 7 samples was positive for Abs in the group of
stable RRMS patients receiving IFN . Stable RRMS patients were less
commonly anti-SNO-cysteine-BSA Ab-positive if they were receiving
IFN (1 of 7 samples, 14%) than if they were untreated (5 of 11 samples, 45%). IFN treatment lessens both overt and subclinical
attack frequency in RRMS so that this difference might have been
anticipated. Overall, 6 of 18 samples (33%) from clinically stable
RRMS patients were positive against 8 of 8 samples (100%) from RRMS
patients in relapse. The difference between relapsing and clinically
stable patients is significant. In our previous study (Boullerne et
al., 1995 ), 38% of MS patients with relapsing-remitting disease in
long-term remission tested positive versus 33% in the present study.
The other groups in the previous study included primary progressive MS,
positive at 50% and not studied here, patients with stabilized
previously progressive MS, positive at 24% and not studied here, and a
group of patients, some in relapse and others that had had an attack within the preceding months (unlike the relapsing patients studied here
who were all in the midst of an attack), positive at 41%.
In SPMS, IFN treatment had little effect on anti-SNO-cysteine Ab
positivity. The untreated group of SPMS patients had 79% positive
samples for Abs, and the group of SPMS patients treated with IFN had
55% positive samples. Thus, 16 of 23 samples (70%) from SPMS patients
were positive overall. IFN treatment fails to slow disability
progression in SPMS, so that the failure of IFN to favorably affect
anti-SNO-cysteine Abs in SPMS is in keeping with clinical experience.
Natural Ab titers rise promptly in humans during infectious illnesses
(Avrameas and Ternynck, 1993 ). Viral infections frequently precede MS
relapses (Sibley et al., 1985 ) and may have driven the
anti-SNO-cysteine Ab elevations seen by us during MS relapses. Eighty-six percent of MS patients tested positive for anti-DNA, antinuclear, and anti-organ-specific autoantibodies during acute attacks. Only 30% remained positive during remission, whereas 92% of
SPMS patients were autoantibody-positive (Spadaro et al., 1999 ). Thus,
there is precedent for our finding of an antibody that correlates with
MS disease activity.
Anti-SNO-cysteine Ab titers are consistently elevated during MS attacks
and are elevated in one-third of samples from patients with clinically
stable disease and in two-thirds of samples from patients with SPMS.
Anti-SNO-cysteine Abs may provide a marker for disease activity in MS.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Dec. 13, 2000; revised Oct. 22, 2001; accepted Oct. 23, 2001.
This work was supported by Institut National de la Santé et de la
Recherche Médicale, Institut Fédératif de Recherche des Neurosciences Cliniques et Expérimentales,
Région d'Aquitaine, Association pour la Recherche Médicale
en Aquitaine (K.G.P.), grants from the National Multiple
Sclerosis Society and Berlex Inc., the Alan Friend Multiple Sclerosis
Research Fund, and gifts from the Mills Family Philanthropic Fund and
the Butz Foundation (B.G.W.A.). A.I.B. and M.A.J. are fellows of the
National Multiple Sclerosis Society. T.T. is recipient of a PhD
fellowship from the Ligue Française contre la Sclerose en
Plaques. We thank Dr. C. Gerin (University of Chicago) for thoughtful
reading of this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Anne I. Boullerne, Department of
Neurology, University of Chicago, MC2030, 5841 South Maryland Avenue,
Chicago, IL 60637. E-mail: abouller{at}neurology.bsd.uchicago.edu.
 |
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