ganglioside--gd1a has been researched along with Multiple-Sclerosis* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for ganglioside--gd1a and Multiple-Sclerosis
Article | Year |
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GD1a Overcomes Inhibition of Myelination by Fibronectin via Activation of Protein Kinase A: Implications for Multiple Sclerosis.
Remyelination failure by oligodendrocytes contributes to the functional impairment that characterizes the demyelinating disease multiple sclerosis (MS). Since incomplete remyelination will irreversibly damage axonal connections, treatments effectively promoting remyelination are pivotal in halting disease progression. Our previous findings suggest that fibronectin aggregates, as an environmental factor, contribute to remyelination failure by perturbing oligodendrocyte progenitor cell (OPC) maturation. Here, we aim at elucidating whether exogenously added gangliosides (i.e., cell surface lipids with a potential to modulate signaling pathways) could counteract fibronectin-mediated inhibition of OPC maturation. Exclusive exposure of rat oligodendrocytes to GD1a, but not other gangliosides, overcomes aggregated fibronectin-induced inhibition of myelin membrane formation, Topics: Animals; Axons; Cells, Cultured; Cuprizone; Cyclic AMP Response Element-Binding Protein; Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases; Demyelinating Diseases; Enzyme Activation; Fibronectins; Gangliosides; Male; Mice; Multiple Sclerosis; Myelin Sheath; Neural Stem Cells; Oligodendroglia; Rats; Signal Transduction | 2017 |
Multiple sclerosis is associated with enhanced B cell responses to the ganglioside GD1a.
The occurrence and role of autoantibodies to gangliosides and other lipid-containing components of the central nervous system in Multiple Sclerosis (MS) are unsettled. Using sensitive ELISAs, we measured IgG and IgM antibody titers and absorbances to the three major gangliosides GD1a, GD1b and GM1, and to sulfatides, cardiolipin and myelin proteins in paired serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from patients with untreated MS, optic neuritis (ON), acute aseptic meningo-encephalitis (AM) and other neurological diseases (OND). Twenty-three per cent of 30 MS (P<0.04) and 18% of 32 ON patients (P<0.05) presented elevated IgG antibody titers to GD1a in serum compared to 9% of patients with OND. Six (40%) of the patients with malignant MS had elevated serum IgG antibody titers to GD1a compared to one (6%) of the patients with benign MS (P<0.04). In CSF, elevated IgG antibody titers to GD1a were measured in 13% of MS and 20% of ON patients compared to 4% of patients with OND (P<0. 03 and P<0.02, respectively). The augmented IgG response to GD1a in serum also separated MS from Guillain-Barré syndrome. Compared to OND increased IgM absorbances to sulfatides and cardiolipin were observed in CSF of patients with MS, but also in AM. Elevated IgG antibody titers to myelin proteins were found more often in MS patients' serum and MS, ON and AM patients' CSF compared to OND. The data implicate that among the multitude of enhanced B-cell responses occurring in MS and ON, that directed to GD1a is common and more discriminative, and should be evaluated in future MS treatment studies. Topics: Adult; Antibodies, Anticardiolipin; Autoantibodies; B-Lymphocytes; Cerebrovascular Disorders; Female; G(M1) Ganglioside; Gangliosides; Humans; Immunoglobulin G; Immunoglobulin M; Male; Meningoencephalitis; Middle Aged; Multiple Sclerosis; Myelin Basic Protein; Nervous System Diseases; Optic Neuritis; Recurrence; Sulfoglycosphingolipids | 1999 |