Pelz_2018_Eur.J.Immunol_48_498

Reference

Title : S1P receptor antagonists fingolimod and siponimod do not improve the outcome of experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis mice after disease onset - Pelz_2018_Eur.J.Immunol_48_498
Author(s) : Pelz A , Schaffert H , Diallo R , Hiepe F , Meisel A , Kohler S
Ref : European Journal of Immunology , 48 :498 , 2018
Abstract :

Myasthenia gravis (MG) is an autoimmune disease characterized by muscle weakness and fatigue in the presence of circulating antibodies against components of the neuromuscular junction. Most patients have a good prognosis, but some are refractory to standard-of-care immunosuppressive treatment and suffer from recurrent myasthenic crises. Functional sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) antagonists like fingolimod and siponimod (BAF312) are successfully used for the treatment of multiple sclerosis, and fingolimod was shown to prevent the development of myasthenic symptoms in experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis (EAMG), the standard model of MG. Here, we investigated whether fingolimod or siponimod improves outcome in EAMG mice when administered after disease onset, modeling the clinical setting in human MG. Both S1P antagonists inhibited lymphocyte egress, resulting in peripheral lymphopenia. After stimulation, there were differences in T-cell responses, but no change in either antibody titers or total or antigen-specific plasma cell populations after treatment. Most importantly, disease incidence and severity were not influenced by fingolimod or siponimod therapy. Although fingolimod and siponimod did lead to subtle changes in T-cell responses, they had no significant effect on antibody titers and disease severity. In conclusion, our data show no evidence of a therapeutic potential for S1P receptor antagonists in MG treatment.

PubMedSearch : Pelz_2018_Eur.J.Immunol_48_498
PubMedID: 29205338

Related information

Citations formats

Pelz A, Schaffert H, Diallo R, Hiepe F, Meisel A, Kohler S (2018)
S1P receptor antagonists fingolimod and siponimod do not improve the outcome of experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis mice after disease onset
European Journal of Immunology 48 :498

Pelz A, Schaffert H, Diallo R, Hiepe F, Meisel A, Kohler S (2018)
European Journal of Immunology 48 :498