An Oral Vaccine Against NMDAR1 with Efficacy in Experimental Stroke and Epilepsy

Matthew J. During(Thomas Jefferson University), C. Wymond Symes, P. Lawlor, John Y. Lin(University of Auckland), Jane Dunning, Helen L. Fitzsimons, David J. Poulsen(Thomas Jefferson University), Paola Leone(Thomas Jefferson University), Ruian Xu, Bridget Dicker, Janusz Lipski(University of Auckland), Deborah Young
Science
February 25, 2000
Cited by 221

Abstract

The brain is generally considered immunoprivileged, although increasing examples of immunological responses to brain antigens, neuronal expression of major histocompatibility class I genes, and neurological autoimmunity have been recognized. An adeno-associated virus (AAV) vaccine generated autoantibodies that targeted a specific brain protein, the NR1 subunit of the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor. After peroral administration of the AAV vaccine, transgene expression persisted for at least 5 months and was associated with a robust humoral response in the absence of a significant cell-mediated response. This single-dose vaccine was associated with strong anti-epileptic and neuroprotective activity in rats for both a kainate-induced seizure model and also a middle cerebral artery occlusion stroke model at 1 to 5 months following vaccination. Thus, a vaccination strategy targeting brain proteins is feasible and may have therapeutic potential for neurological disorders.


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