Molecular immunology
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Molecular immunology · Sep 2017
ReviewDemyelination, strokes, and eculizumab: Lessons from the congenital CD59 gene mutations.
Neurological symptoms of patients with p. Cys89Tyr mutation in the CD59 gene include recurrent peripheral neuropathy resembling Guillain-Barré syndrome, characterized by sensory-motor demyelinating neuropathy with secondary axonal damage and moderate enhancement of the nerve roots on spine MRI, together with recurrent strokes and retinal involvement. Three additional mutations in CD59, leading to loss of function, have been described, and overall, 12/12 (100%) of patients with any mutation presented with neurological symptoms; 11/12 (92%) patients presented with recurrent peripheral neuropathy, 6/12 (50%) with recurrent strokes, and 1/12 (8%) with retinal involvement. ⋯ We then describe the relationship with demyelination. The lack of CD59 allows uncontrolled complement amplification following low-level spontaneous-, viral-, or post viral-induced complement activation, resulting in severe demyelination in the peripheral nervous system. It is interesting, and certainly encouraging, that after 3 years, following 4 patients with Cys89Tyr mutations who are treated with eculizumab, no strokes occurred and non-permanent neurological insults underwent resolution without any new neurological exacerbations.