12 results match your criteria: "Departments of Neurology and Clinical Medicine[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • The study explores the relationship between ovarian cancer (OC) and anti-Yo-associated paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration (PCD), focusing on changes in exosomal microRNA (miRNA) profiles in OC patients with PCD compared to healthy individuals and those without PCD.
  • Serum exosomes from three groups (OC with PCD, OC without PCD, and healthy controls) were analyzed, revealing 103 differentially expressed miRNAs in PCD patients versus OC patients without PCD, and 139 versus healthy controls.
  • Key miRNAs such as miR-486-5p and miR-21-5p showed potential as biomarkers for diagnosing PCD and indicated a link between these miRNAs and the
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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates cerebellar degeneration-related (CDR) proteins and their involvement in paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration (PCD), a rare neurodegenerative disease caused by autoimmune responses to tumors, focusing specifically on the CDR2L protein in ovarian cancer.
  • - Researchers employed RNA sequencing and mass spectrometry to analyze ovarian cancer cell lines lacking the CDR proteins (CDR1, CDR2, and CDR2L) and identified distinct changes in gene and protein expression linked to the absence of these proteins.
  • - The findings revealed that knocking out CDR2L led to disrupted expression of genes related to ribosome function and cell cycle, resulting in decreased cell proliferation, thus offering new insights and
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Background And Purpose: Commercially available tests for Yo antibody detection have low specificity for paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration (PCD) because these assays use cerebellar degeneration-related protein 2 (CDR2) as the antigen, not CDR2-like (CDR2L). We aimed to test the hypothesis that use of a CDR2L cell-based assay (CBA), as an additional screening technique, would increase the accuracy of Yo-PCD diagnosis.

Methods: An in-house CBA to test for anti-CDR2L antibodies was developed and used to screen sera from 48 patients with confirmed anti-Yo-associated PCD.

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Elucidation of the mechanisms involved in neurodegenerative diseases of the cerebellum has been hampered by the lack of robust single cell models to study Purkinje neurons and replicate at the same time in vivo features. Cerebellar Purkinje neurons are difficult to grow in dispersed cell culture, and only limited work has been done using rat cells. We developed a refined protocol for growing rat Purkinje neurons from embryonic and postnatal tissue ex vivo that results in well-developed, mature, functional, and synaptically active neurons.

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Expression of cerebellar degeneration-related proteins CDR2 and CDR2L in human and rat brain tissue.

J Neuroimmunol

January 2022

Department of Neurology, Haukeland University Hospital, Pb 1400, 5021 Bergen, Norway; Department of Clinical Medicine, University of Bergen, Pb 7804, 5020 Bergen, Norway; Neuro-SysMed - Centre of Excellence for Experimental Therapy in Neurology, Departments of Neurology and Clinical Medicine, Pb 1400, 5021 Bergen, Norway. Electronic address:

Patients with ovarian cancer and paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration, a cancer-related immune disorder, often have anti-Yo antibody. Here we studied the distributions of anti-Yo antigens CDR2L and CDR2 in rat and human brain using immunohistochemistry and western blot. CDR2L localized mainly to the Purkinje cells and large neurons scattered in the brain stem.

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Updated Diagnostic Criteria for Paraneoplastic Neurologic Syndromes.

Neurol Neuroimmunol Neuroinflamm

July 2021

From the Neuroimmunology Program (F.G., J.D.), Institut d'Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS), Barcelona, Spain; Centre de Référence National pour les Syndromes Neurologiques Paranéoplasique (A.V., S.M.-C., J.-C.G.A., V.D., B.J., L.T., J.H.), Hôpital Neurologique, Hospices Civils de Lyon; SynatAc Team (A.V., S.M.-C., V.D., B.J., L.T., J.H.), NeuroMyoGene Institute, INSERM U1217/CNRS UMR5310, Lyon; Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (A.V., S.M.-C., V.D., B.J., L.T., J.H.), Université de Lyon; Service de Neurologie (J.-C.G.A.), CHU de Saint-Etienne, France; Department of Neurology (D.D., A.M.), Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN; Neurology Unit (B.G.), Trento Hospital, Azienda Provinciale per I Servizi Sanitari (APSS) di Trento, Italy; Oxford Autoimmune Neurology Group (S.R.I.), Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, John Radcliffe Hospital, University of Oxford, United Kingdom; Neuroimmunology Section (F.L.), Institute of Clinical Chemistry, University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein Kiel/Lübeck; German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE) Berlin (H.P.), and Department of Neurology and Experimental Neurology (H.P.), Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Germany; Centre de Compétence des Syndromes Neurologiques Paranéoplasiques et Encéphalites Autoimmunes (D.P.), Groupe Hospitalier Pitié-Salpêtrière, Paris, France; Department of Neurology 2 Mazarin (D.P.), and INSERM U 1127 (D.P.), CNRS UMR 7225, Centre de Recherche de l'Institut du Cerveau et de la Moelle Epinière Groupe, Hospitalier Pitié-Salpêtriêre et Université Pierre et Marie Curie-Paris 6, AP-HP, France; Department of Neurology (M.J.T.), Erasmus MC University Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands; Department of Clinical Medicine (C.A.V.), University of Bergen; Department of Neurology (C.A.V.), Haukeland University Hospital; Neuro-SysMed-Centre of Excellence for Experimental Therapy in Neurology (C.A.V.), Departments of Neurology and Clinical Medicine, Bergen, Norway; and Neurology Department (J.J.V.), Leiden University Medical Center, the Netherlands.

Objective: The contemporary diagnosis of paraneoplastic neurologic syndromes (PNSs) requires an increasing understanding of their clinical, immunologic, and oncologic heterogeneity. The 2004 PNS criteria are partially outdated due to advances in PNS research in the last 16 years leading to the identification of new phenotypes and antibodies that have transformed the diagnostic approach to PNS. Here, we propose updated diagnostic criteria for PNS.

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Paraneoplastic Cerebellar Degeneration: The Importance of Including CDR2L as a Diagnostic Marker.

Neurol Neuroimmunol Neuroinflamm

March 2021

From the Department of Neurology (I.H., M.H., C.T., C.V.), Haukeland University Hospital; Department of Clinical Medicine (I.H., K.M., C.V.), University of Bergen; and Departments of Neurology and Clinical Medicine (I.H., C.T., C.V.), Neuro-SysMed-Centre of Excellence for Experimental Therapy in Neurology, Bergen, Norway.

Objective: Investigate the value of including cerebellar degeneration-related protein 2-like (CDR2L) as a marker in commercial diagnostic tests for anti-Yo-associated paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration (PCD).

Methods: We included sera and CSF samples from 24 patients with suspected PCD (6 of whom had PCD with underlying gynecologic or breast cancer), who were positive for Yo antibodies using the commercially available, paraneoplastic neurologic syndromes (PNS) 14 Line Assay from Ravo Diagnostika. The samples were further evaluated using the EUROLINE PNS 12 Ag Line Assay and a cell-based assay (CBA) from Euroimmun.

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Objective: Identify the subcellular location and potential binding partners of two cerebellar degeneration-related proteins, CDR2L and CDR2, associated with anti-Yo-mediated paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration.

Methods: Cancer cells, rat Purkinje neuron cultures, and human cerebellar sections were exposed to cerebrospinal fluid and serum from patients with paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration with Yo antibodies and with several antibodies against CDR2L and CDR2. We used mass spectrometry-based proteomics, super-resolution microscopy, proximity ligation assay, and co-immunoprecipitation to verify the antibodies and to identify potential binding partners.

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Can serum GAD65 antibody levels predict neurological disease or cancer?

J Neuroimmunol

November 2019

Department of Neurology, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway; Department of Clinical Medicine, University of Bergen, Norway; Neuro-SysMed - Centre of Excellence for Experimental Therapy in Neurology, Departments of Neurology and Clinical Medicine, Bergen, Norway. Electronic address:

The clinical relevance of antibodies that bind to glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 (GAD65) is controversial regarding diagnostic utility in screening for neurological disease or cancer. We did a retrospective study of 3152 GAD65 antibody-positive patients to examine whether analysis of the antibody levels could predict neurological disease or cancer. Serum GAD65 antibody levels were not associated with any of the following groups: neurological disease, neurological disease and diabetes, diabetes only, no neurological diagnosis and no diabetes mellitus, or cancer.

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The pathogenesis of Yo-mediated paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration (PCD) is unclear. We applied cerebrospinal fluid and serum from PCD patients as well as CDR2 and CDR2L antibodies to neuronal tissue, cancer cell lines, and cells transfected with recombinant CDR2 and CDR2L to elucidate which is the major antigen of Yo antibodies. We found that Yo antibodies bound endogenous CDR2L, but not endogenous CDR2.

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