Neural Immunoglobulins Shape Brain Circuits.
Michel Salzet
Abstract
Open AccessMounting evidence challenges the view that antibodies reach the brain solely via vascular leaks. Neurons, astrocytes and microglia appear able to assemble restricted and context-dependent immunoglobulin repertoires via cryptic V(D)J recombination, splice-and-link RNA editing and retroelement-assisted rearrangements. These endogenous antibodies have been associated with complement-mediated pruning, receptor trafficking and astrocyte-neuron metabolic coupling and may change after injury. However, causal evidence from in vivo, cell-type-specific gain- or loss-of-function models remains sparse. Accordingly, we synthesise current evidence and outline testable, conservative hypotheses about when and how neural immunoglobulins might influence CNS function and disease.