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Transcobalamin Receptor Autoantibodies in Central Vitamin B12 Deficiency

Pluvinage, J. V.; Ngo, T.; Bartley, C. M.; Bodansky, A.; Alvarenga, B. D.; Zorn, K. C.; Fouassier, C.; Zamecnik, C.; McCann, A.; Huynh, T.; Browne, W.; Tubati, A.; Kondapavulur, S.; Anderson, M. S.; Green, A. J.; Green, R.; Douglas, V.; Louine, M.; Cree, B.; Hauser, S.; Seeley, W.; Holmes, B. B.; Wells, J. A.; Spudich, S.; Farhadian, S.; Ramachandran, P.; Gillum, L.; Hales, C. M.; Smith, B.; Nath, A.; Suh, G. A.; Flanagan, E. P.; Gelfand, J. M.; DeRisi, J. L.; Pleasure, S. J.; Wilson, M. R.

2023-08-22 neurology
10.1101/2023.08.21.23294253 medRxiv
Show abstract

Vitamin B12 is critical for hematopoiesis and myelination.1 Deficiency can cause neurologic deficits including loss of coordination, spasticity, and cognitive decline.2,3,4 However, diagnosis relies on vitamin B12 measurement in the blood which may not accurately reflect levels in the brain. Here, we discovered an autoimmune cause of vitamin B12 deficiency restricted to the central nervous system (CNS), termed autoimmune B12 central deficiency (ABCD). Using programmable phage display, we identified an autoantibody targeting the transcobalamin receptor (CD320) in a patient with progressive tremor, ataxia, and scanning speech. Patient immunoglobulins impaired cellular uptake of vitamin B12 in vitro. Despite normal serum levels, vitamin B12 was nearly undetectable in her cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Immunosuppressive treatment and high-dose systemic vitamin B12 supplementation were associated with increased CSF B12 levels and clinical improvement. Autoantibodies targeting the same epitope of CD320 were identified in 7 other patients with neurologic deficits of unknown etiology and in 6 percent of healthy controls. In 132 paired serum and CSF samples, detection of anti-CD320 in the blood predicted B12 deficiency in the brain. These findings elucidate a new autoimmune cause of metabolic neurologic disease that may be amenable to immunomodulatory treatment and/or nutritional supplementation.

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