Late-onset myasthenia gravis - CTLA4low genotype association and low-for-age thymic output of naïve T cells

  • Wen Yu Chuang
  • , Philipp Ströbel
  • , Anna Lena Bohlender-Willke
  • , Peter Rieckmann
  • , Wilfred Nix
  • , Berthold Schalke
  • , Ralf Gold
  • , Andreas Opitz
  • , Erdwine Klinker
  • , Masayoshi Inoue
  • , Hans Konrad Müller-Hermelink
  • , Güher Saruhan-Direskeneli
  • , Peter Bugert
  • , Nick Willcox
  • , Alexander Marx*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Article peer-review

26 Scopus citations

Abstract

Late-onset myasthenia gravis (LOMG) has become the largest MG subgroup, but the underlying pathogenetic mechanisms remain mysterious. Among the few etiological clues are the almost unique serologic parallels between LOMG and thymoma-associated MG (TAMG), notably autoantibodies against acetylcholine receptors, titin, ryanodine receptor, type I interferons or IL-12. This is why we checked LOMG patients for two further peculiar features of TAMG - its associations with the CTLA4high/gain-of-function+49A/A genotype and with increased thymic export of naïve T cells into the blood, possibly after defective negative selection in AIRE-deficient thymomas. We analyzed genomic DNA from 116 Caucasian LOMG patients for CTLA4 alleles by PCR/restriction fragment length polymorphism, and blood mononuclear cells for recent thymic emigrants by quantitative PCR for T cell receptor excision circles. In sharp contrast with TAMG, we now find that: i) CTLA4low+49G(+) genotypes were more frequent (p=0.0029) among the 69 LOMG patients with age at onset ≥60 years compared with 172 healthy controls; ii) thymic export of naïve T cells from the non-neoplastic thymuses of 36 LOMG patients was lower (p=0.0058) at diagnosis than in 77 age-matched controls. These new findings are important because they suggest distinct initiating mechanisms in TAMG and LOMG and hint at aberrant immuno-regulation in the periphery in LOMG. We therefore propose alternate defects in central thymic or peripheral tolerance induction in TAMG and LOMG converging on similar final outcomes. In addition, our data support a 60-year-threshold for onset of 'true LOMG' and an LOMG/early-onset MG overlapping group of patients between 40 and 60.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)122-129
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of Autoimmunity
Volume52
DOIs
StatePublished - 08 2014

Keywords

  • AIRE
  • CTLA4
  • Myasthenia gravis
  • Myoid cells
  • TRECs
  • Thymus

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