自身抗体
胸腺瘤
重症肌无力
抗体
医学
生物标志物
免疫学
病理
生物
生物化学
作者
Juliette Svahn,Laurent Coudert,Nathalie Streichenberger,Alexandra Kraut,Alice Gravier-Dumonceau-Mazelier,Ludivine Rotard,Laurence Calemard-Michel,Rita Menassa,Elisabeth Errazuriz-Cerda,Lara Chalabreysse,Alexis Osseni,Christophe Vial,Laurentiu Jomir,François Tronc,Le Duy,E Bernard,Vincent Gache,Yohann Couté,Vincent Jacquemond,Laurent Schaeffer
标识
DOI:10.1212/nxi.0000000000200068
摘要
Objectives
Rippling muscle disease (RMD) is characterized by muscle stiffness, muscle hypertrophy, and rippling muscle induced by stretching or percussion. Hereditary RMD is due to sequence variants in the CAV3 and PTRF/CAVIN1 genes encoding Caveolin-3 or Cavin-1, respectively; a few series of patients with acquired autoimmune forms of RMD (iRMD) associated with AChR antibody–positive myasthenia gravis and/or thymoma have also been described. Recently, MURC/caveolae-associated protein 4 (Cavin-4) autoantibody was identified in 8 of 10 patients without thymoma, highlighting its potential both as a biomarker and as a triggering agent of this pathology. Here, we report the case of a patient with iRMD-AchR antibody negative associated with thymoma. Methods
We suspected a paraneoplastic origin and investigated the presence of specific autoantibodies targeting muscle antigens through a combination of Western blotting and affinity purification coupled with mass spectrometry–based proteomic approaches. Results
We identified circulating MURC/Cavin-4 autoantibodies and found strong similarities between histologic features of the patient9s muscle and those commonly reported in caveolinopathies. Strikingly, MURC/Cavin-4 autoantibody titer strongly decreased after tumor resection and immunotherapy correlating with complete disappearance of the rippling phenotype and full patient remission. Discussion
MURC/Cavin-4 autoantibodies may play a pathogenic role in paraneoplastic iRMD associated with thymoma.
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