Multiple sclerosis serum and cerebrospinal fluid immunoglobulin binding to fc receptors of oligodendrocytes

Abstract
Suspensions of bovine oligodendrocytes were used to study the immunofluorescent staining properties of sera from multiple sclerosis (MS) patients and normal individuals. All sera (14 MS patients, 8 patients with other neurological diseases, and 11 normal individuals) showed positive oligodendrocyte staining by indirect immunofluorescence. Staining persisted after extensive absorption of sera with bovine liver to remove nonspecific binding. Similar findings were obtained for cerebrospinal fluid from all 5 MS patients as well as all 5 patients with other neurological diseases. In additional studies to determine if binding is mediated by the Fc fragment of IgG, results were: (1) ultracentrifuged normal and MS sera failed to react with oligodendrocytes, (2) positive staining with oligodendrocytes was observed after heat aggregation of IgG, (3) ox red blood cells, complexed with antibody, reacted with oligodendrocytes to produce strong rosette formation, and (4) the rosette formation could be blocked by prior treatment of oligodendrocytes with heat-aggregated IgG. The studies fail to support a previous claim for specific binding of immunoglobulins to oligodendrocytes in MS. However, they confirm and extend previous findings that the binding of IgG to oligodendrocytes may not necessarily be an antigen-antibody reaction. Therefore, adherence reactions with a putative antibody must exclude Fc-mediated binding.