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Autoimmune profiling suggests paraneoplastic etiology in pediatric ROHHAD

Authors :
Katwa U
Tomko S
Leslie Benson
Joseph L. DeRisi
McCarthy F
Lillian M. Khan
Caleigh Mandel-Brehm
Josep Dalmau
Vazquez Se
Tran B
Sample Ha
Kelsey C. Zorn
Mark P. Gorman
Michael R. Wilson
Patrick L McAlpine
Kerr Lm
Zhang L
Hanna Retallack
Samuel J. Pleasure
Kung Af
Joshua E. Elias
Sabrina A Mann
William W. Seeley
Christina M Astley
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

ROHHAD (Rapid-onset Obesity with Hypothalamic Dysfunction, Hypoventilation and Autonomic Dysregulation) is a rare, yet severe pediatric disorder resulting in hypothalamic dysfunction and frequent sudden death. Genetic and other investigations have failed to identify an etiology or diagnostic test. Frequent co-occurrence of neuroblastic tumors (NTs) and cerebrospinal fluid inflammation point to an autoimmune paraneoplastic neurological syndrome (PNS); however, specific anti-neural autoantibodies, a hallmark of PNS, have not been identified. Here, we screened antibodies from a curated cohort of ROHHAD patients (n=9) and controls (n=150) using a programmable phage display of the human peptidome (PhIP-Seq). Our ROHHAD cohort exhibited frequent association with NTs (8/9) and features consistent with autoimmune etiology. Autoantibodies to Zinc finger and SCAN domain-containing protein 1 (ZSCAN1) were discovered and orthogonally validated in 7 of 9 ROHHAD patients, all of whom had NTs, and shown to be absent in non-ROHHAD pediatric patients with NTs. Notably, human ZSCAN1 expression was confirmed in ROHHAD tumor and healthy human hypothalamus. Our results support the notion that tumor-associated ROHHAD is a pediatric PNS, potentially initiated by an immune response to peripheral NT. ZSCAN1 autoantibodies may aid in an accurate diagnosis of ROHHAD, thus providing a means toward early detection and treatment. Lastly, given the absence of the ZSCAN1 gene in rodents, our study highlights the value of human-based approaches in addition to the classical rodent-based approaches for detecting novel PNS subtypes.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........19ccbe375625c6289894614dd3ef3c5d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.06.04.21257478