EMBO Molecular Medicine (Sep 2020)

Protective anti‐prion antibodies in human immunoglobulin repertoires

  • Assunta Senatore,
  • Karl Frontzek,
  • Marc Emmenegger,
  • Andra Chincisan,
  • Marco Losa,
  • Regina Reimann,
  • Geraldine Horny,
  • Jingjing Guo,
  • Sylvie Fels,
  • Silvia Sorce,
  • Caihong Zhu,
  • Nathalie George,
  • Stefan Ewert,
  • Thomas Pietzonka,
  • Simone Hornemann,
  • Adriano Aguzzi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15252/emmm.202012739
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 9
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Prion immunotherapy may hold great potential, but antibodies against certain PrP epitopes can be neurotoxic. Here, we identified > 6,000 PrP‐binding antibodies in a synthetic human Fab phage display library, 49 of which we characterized in detail. Antibodies directed against the flexible tail of PrP conferred neuroprotection against infectious prions. We then mined published repertoires of circulating B cells from healthy humans and found antibodies similar to the protective phage‐derived antibodies. When expressed recombinantly, these antibodies exhibited anti‐PrP reactivity. Furthermore, we surveyed 48,718 samples from 37,894 hospital patients for the presence of anti‐PrP IgGs and found 21 high‐titer individuals. The clinical files of these individuals did not reveal any enrichment of specific pathologies, suggesting that anti‐PrP autoimmunity is innocuous. The existence of anti‐prion antibodies in unbiased human immunological repertoires suggests that they might clear nascent prions early in life. Combined with the reported lack of such antibodies in carriers of disease‐associated PRNP mutations, this suggests a link to the low incidence of spontaneous prion diseases in human populations.

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