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  lüll Pathophysiological actions of neuropathy-related anti-ganglioside antibodies at  the neuromuscular junction Plomp JJ; Willison HJJ Physiol  2009[Aug]; 587 (Pt 16): 3979-99The outer leaflet of neuronal membranes is highly enriched in gangliosides.  Therefore, specific neuronal roles have been attributed to this family of  sialylated glycosphingolipids, e.g. in modulation of ion channels and  transporters, neuronal interaction and recognition, temperature adaptation,  Ca(2+) homeostasis, axonal growth, (para)node of Ranvier stability and synaptic  transmission. Recent developmental, ageing and injury studies on transgenic mice  lacking subsets of gangliosides indicate that gangliosides are involved in  maintenance rather than development of the nervous system and that ganglioside  family members are able to act in a mutually compensatory manner. Besides having  physiological functions, gangliosides are the likely antigenic targets of  autoantibodies present in Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS), a group of neuropathies  with clinical symptoms of motor- and/or sensory peripheral nerve dysfunction.  Antibody binding to peripheral nerves is thought to either interfere with  ganglioside function or activate complement, causing axonal damage and thereby  disturbed action potential conduction. The presynaptic motor nerve terminal at  the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) may be a prominent target because it is highly  enriched in gangliosides and lies outside the blood-nerve barrier, allowing  antibody access. The ensuing neuromuscular synaptopathy might contribute to the  muscle weakness in GBS patients. Several groups, including our own, have studied  the effects of anti-ganglioside antibodies in ex vivo and in vivo experimental  settings at mouse NMJs. Here, after providing a background overview on  ganglioside synthesis, localization and physiology, we will review those studies,  which clearly show that anti-ganglioside antibodies are capable of binding to  NMJs and thereby can exert a variety of pathophysiological effects. Furthermore,  we will discuss the human clinical electrophysiological and histological evidence  produced so far of the existence of a neuromuscular synaptopathy contributing to  muscle weakness in GBS patients.|Animals[MESH]|Autoantibodies/*immunology[MESH]|Gangliosides/*immunology[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Immunity, Innate/*immunology[MESH]|Models, Immunological[MESH]|Models, Neurological[MESH]|Neuromuscular Junction Diseases/*immunology[MESH]|Neuromuscular Junction/*immunology[MESH] |