Reversible opening of the blood-brain barrier by anti-bacterial antibodies.

EI Tuomanen, SM Prasad, JS George… - Proceedings of the …, 1993 - National Acad Sciences
EI Tuomanen, SM Prasad, JS George, AI Hoepelman, P Ibsen, I Heron, RM Starzyk
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1993National Acad Sciences
The leukocyte adhesion molecule CR3 (CD11b/CD18, Mac-1) promotes leukocyte
transmigration into tissues by engaging an unknown cognate ligand on the surface of
vascular endothelial cells. Filamentous hemagglutinin (FHA), an adhesin of the bacterium
Bordetella pertussis, binds to CR3. We hypothesized that FHA mimics the native ligand for
the CR3 integrin on endothelial cells and predicted that anti-FHA antibodies should bind to
endothelial cells, interfere with leukocyte recruitment, and induce endothelial permeability …
The leukocyte adhesion molecule CR3 (CD11b/CD18, Mac-1) promotes leukocyte transmigration into tissues by engaging an unknown cognate ligand on the surface of vascular endothelial cells. Filamentous hemagglutinin (FHA), an adhesin of the bacterium Bordetella pertussis, binds to CR3. We hypothesized that FHA mimics the native ligand for the CR3 integrin on endothelial cells and predicted that anti-FHA antibodies should bind to endothelial cells, interfere with leukocyte recruitment, and induce endothelial permeability. Anti-FHA monoclonal antibodies bound to cerebral microvessels in sections from human brain and upon intravenous injection into rabbits. Antibody binding correlated with the ability to recognize two polypeptides in extracts of human cerebral vessels that were also bound by CD18. In vivo, antibody binding not only interfered with transmigration of leukocytes into cerebrospinal fluid but also induced a dose-dependent reversible increase in blood-brain barrier permeability sufficient to improve delivery of intravenously administered therapeutic agents to brain parenchyma.
National Acad Sciences