Anti-IGLON5 disease: A new case without neuropathologic evidence of brainstem tauopathy.

Neurol Neuroimmunol Neuroinflamm

From the Neurology Department (M.E.E., L.M., M.H., A.O.), Complejo Hospitalario de Navarra, Navarra Institute for Health Research (IdiSNA), Pamplona; Neuroimmunology Program (L.S., F.G.), Institut d'Investigació Biomèdica August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS), Hospital Clinic, Barcelona; Neurophysiology Department (I.G.d.G.), Complejo Hospitalario de Navarra; Brain Bank (T.T.), Navarrabiomed, Navarra Institute for Health Research (IdiSNA), Pamplona, Spain; Institute of Neurology (E.G.), Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria; and Neurological Tissue Bank of the Hospital Clinic-IDIBAPS Biobank (E.G.), Barcelona, Spain.

Published: March 2020

Objective: To describe the neuropathologic features and the molecular data of phosphorylated tau (pTau) in a new case of anti-IgLON5 disease.

Methods: Review of clinical data, postmortem neuropathologic examination. Biochemical analyses of pTau were performed in brain samples from the present case and from a previously described patient with anti-IgLON5 with the characteristic brainstem tauopathy.

Results: The patient was a 71-year-old man with a clinical syndrome consisting of sleep disturbance and bulbar symptoms. IgLON5 antibodies of predominant IgG4 subtype were detected in serum and CSF. He carried the HLA DRB1*10:01-DQB1*05:01 haplotype. Despite treatment with IV immunoglobulins, he unexpectedly died during sleep 2 years after disease onset. Histology showed neurofibrillary pathology and β-amyloid deposits consistent with Alzheimer disease (AD) of intermediate severity. pTau deposits were absent in the brainstem. There were few perivascular CD8 T-cell infiltrates in the posterior hypothalamus, amygdala, and brainstem with microglial activation. The pTau immunoblot showed a pattern of bands consistent with AD, which was different from that observed in the patient with anti-IgLON5 with brainstem tauopathy who presented a differential band around 56 KDa.

Conclusion: The absence of pTau deposits in the brainstem of the present patient suggests that the tauopathy of patients with anti-IgLON5 disease may be a late, secondary event. The anti-IgLON5 brainstem tauopathy has a specific molecular signature different from primary tauopathies. pTau deposits restricted to the hippocampus/limbic regions of patients with anti-IgLON5 may represent an age-related comorbidity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7007636PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1212/NXI.0000000000000651DOI Listing

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