Nature: In Tanzania, Uganda and South Sudan, nodding syndrome causes
children's heads to drop and results in epileptic seizures, cognitive
impairment and sometimes death. Although people with the syndrome are
often infected with the parasitic worm Onchocerca volvulus (pictured), researchers have not found a causal link between the two.
Now,
a team led by Avindra Nath at the National Institute of Neurological
Disorders and Stroke in Bethesda, Maryland, has discovered that people
with nodding syndrome have higher levels of antibodies against a protein
called leiomodin-1 than do healthy people from the same village. The
researchers show that leiomodin-1 is made by human neurons and by key
parts of the mouse brain. This protein is structurally similar to those
made by O. volvulus, and antibodies that react against O. volvulus do the same against leiomodin-1, suggesting an autoimmune response.
People
with the syndrome currently receive anti-epilepsy drugs, but the
findings suggest that they might also benefit from therapies that
modulate the immune system, the authors say.
Sci. Transl. Med. 9, eaaf6953 (2017)