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Dive into the research topics where John McConville is active.

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Featured researches published by John McConville.


Nature Medicine | 2001

Auto-antibodies to the receptor tyrosine kinase MuSK in patients with myasthenia gravis without acetylcholine receptor antibodies

Werner Hoch; John McConville; Sigrun Helms; John Newsom-Davis; Arthur Melms; Angela Vincent

Myasthenia gravis (MG) is an antibody-mediated autoimmune disease of the neuromuscular junction. In approximately 80% of patients, auto-antibodies to the muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) are present. These antibodies cause loss of AChR numbers and function, and lead to failure of neuromuscular transmission with muscle weakness. The pathogenic mechanisms acting in the 20% of patients with generalized MG who are seronegative for AChR-antibodies (AChR-Ab) have not been elucidated, but there is evidence that they also have an antibody-mediated disorder, with the antibodies directed towards another, previously unidentified muscle-surface–membrane target. Here we show that 70% of AChR-Ab–seronegative MG patients, but not AChR-Ab–seropositive MG patients, have serum auto-antibodies against the muscle-specific receptor tyrosine kinase, MuSK. MuSK mediates the agrin-induced clustering of AChRs during synapse formation, and is also expressed at the mature neuromuscular junction. The MuSK antibodies were specific for the extracellular domains of MuSK expressed in transfected COS7 cells and strongly inhibited MuSK function in cultured myotubes. Our results indicate the involvement of MuSK antibodies in the pathogenesis of AChR-Ab–seronegative MG, thus defining two immunologically distinct forms of the disease. Measurement of MuSK antibodies will substantially aid diagnosis and clinical management.


Neurology | 2003

Clinical aspects of MuSK antibody positive seronegative MG

Donald B. Sanders; Khalid El-Salem; Janice M. Massey; John McConville; Angela Vincent

Serum antibodies to muscle-specific receptor tyrosine kinase were detected in 12 of 32 patients with generalized seronegative MG. All were women, with onset between ages 21 and 59 years. Seven had prominent neck, shoulder, or respiratory muscle weakness and little or delayed ocular muscle involvement. The response to cholinesterase inhibitors was variable, and electromyographic findings suggested myopathy in several. None improved after thymectomy. All patients improved after plasma exchange, and most had a good response to selected immunotherapy. MuSK antibody status should help diagnose MG with atypical presentations and ensure appropriate patient treatment.


Annals of Neurology | 2004

Detection and characterization of MuSK antibodies in seronegative myasthenia gravis

John McConville; Maria Elena Farrugia; David Beeson; Uday Kishore; Richard Metcalfe; John Newsom-Davis; Angela Vincent

Antibodies to rat muscle specific kinase, MuSK, have recently been identified in some generalized “seronegative” myasthenia gravis (SNMG) patients, who are often females with marked bulbar symptoms. Using immunoprecipitation of 125I‐labelled‐human MuSK, 27 of 66 (41%) seronegative patients were positive, but 18 ocular SNMG patients, 105 AChR antibody positive MG patients, and 108 controls were negative. The antibodies are of high affinity (Kds around 100 pM) with titers between 1 and 200 nM. They bind to the extracellular Ig‐like domains of soluble or native MuSK. Surprisingly they are predominantly in the IgG4 subclass. MuSK‐antibody associated MG may be differnet in etiological and pathological mechanisms.


Muscle & Nerve | 2004

Clinical comparison of muscle‐specific tyrosine kinase (MuSK) antibody‐positive and ‐negative myasthenic patients

Lan Zhou; John McConville; Vinay Chaudhry; Robert N. Adams; Richard L. Skolasky; Angela Vincent; Daniel B. Drachman

We assayed cryopreserved sera from 38 acetylcholine receptor (AChR) antibody‐negative patients with myasthenia gravis (MG) who were followed clinically for muscle‐specific tyrosine kinase (MuSK) antibodies and analyzed and compared their clinical characteristics. None of 13 sera from patients with purely ocular MG were positive. Sera from 10 of 25 patients (40%) with generalized MG were positive for MuSK antibodies. The age at onset of myasthenic symptoms was significantly earlier in MuSK antibody‐positive patients (P = 0.02). MuSK antibodies were present in AChR antibody‐negative patients of either gender, with virtually identical prevalence in women (41.2%) and men (37.5%). The distribution of weakness more commonly involved neck muscles in MuSK antibody‐positive patients, and limb muscles in MuSK antibody‐negative patients. Patients responded to immunosuppressive treatment regardless of whether MuSK antibody was present. We conclude that MuSK antibodies are present and diagnostically useful in a subset of myasthenic patients without AChR antibodies. Although the distribution of weakness differs somewhat depending on whether MuSK antibodies are present, responses to anticholinesterase and immunosuppressive treatments are similar.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2011

The use of rituximab in myasthenia gravis and Lambert–Eaton myasthenic syndrome

Paul Maddison; John McConville; Maria Elena Farrugia; Nicholas Davies; Michael R. Rose; Fiona Norwood; Heinz Jungbluth; S. Robb; David Hilton-Jones

Aim To assess the treatment effects of rituximab in a population of patients with myasthenia gravis and Lambert–Eaton myasthenic syndrome. Methods Data on all treated patients in the UK were collected from referring physicians, with full case ascertainment and follow-up. Results Since 2004, 10 patients with generalised myasthenia gravis (three of whom were positive for muscle-specific tyrosine kinase (MuSK) antibodies) and two patients with Lambert–Eaton myasthenic syndrome (LEMS) were treated with rituximab. Using the Myasthenia Gravis Foundation America postintervention status, three patients (25%) achieved remission, and a further five (42%) improved clinically over an 18-month period. Only one patient developed worsening symptoms. The probability of achieving remission was unrelated to the duration of neurological symptoms prior to treatment. All LEMS and MuSK antibody patients improved following rituximab treatment. Conclusion In a relatively large, unselected group of patients with myasthenia gravis and LEMS, rituximab treatment resulted in a significant clinical improvement in two-thirds of cases. As a selective, B cell targeted therapy, rituximab should be considered as a treatment option for patients with either myasthenia gravis or LEMS for whom standard immunosuppressive treatments have been unsuccessful.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2003

Antibodies in Myasthenia Gravis and Related Disorders

Angela Vincent; John McConville; Maria Elena Farrugia; John C. Bowen; Paul Plested; Teresa Tang; Amelia Evoli; Ian Matthews; Gary Sims; Paola Dalton; Leslie Jacobson; Agata Polizzi; Frans Blaes; Bethan Lang; David Beeson; Nick Willcox; John Newsom-Davis; Werner Hoch

Abstract: Acetylcholine receptor (AChR) antibodies are present in around 85% of patients with myasthenia gravis (MG) as measured by the conventional radioimmunoprecipitation assay. Antibodies that block the fetal form of the AChR are occasionally present in mothers who develop MG after pregnancy, especially in those whose babies are born with arthrogryposis multiplex congenita. The antibodies cross the placenta and block neuromuscular transmission, leading to joint deformities and often stillbirth. In these mothers, antibodies made in the thymus are mainly specific for fetal AChR and show restricted germline origins, suggesting a highly mutated clonal response; subsequent spread to involve adult AChR could explain development of maternal MG in those cases who first present after pregnancy. In the 15% of “seronegative” MG patients without AChR antibodies (SNMG), there are serum factors that increase AChR phosphorylation and reduce AChR function, probably acting via a different membrane receptor. These factors are not IgG and could be IgM or even non‐Ig serum proteins. In a proportion of SNMG patients, however, IgG antibodies to the muscle‐specific kinase, MuSK, are present. These antibodies are not found in AChR antibody‐positive MG and are predominantly IgG4. MuSK antibody positivity appears to be associated with more severe bulbar disease that can be difficult to treat effectively.


Journal of Neuroimmunology | 2002

Thymic myoid cells and germinal center formation in myasthenia gravis; possible roles in pathogenesis.

Ioannis Roxanis; Kingsley J. Micklem; John McConville; John Newsom-Davis; Nick Willcox

In early-onset myasthenia gravis (EOMG), the thymus usually shows medullary lymph node-type infiltrates, rearranged bands of hyperplastic epithelium and focal fenestrations in the intervening laminin borders. This resemblance to autoimmune target organs may reflect autoantigen expression by rare thymic myoid cells, long ago implicated circumstantially as agents provocateurs. In this quantitative study, they were frequently seen at the laminin fenestrations; if so, germinal centers (GC) were significantly commoner nearby, our most EOMG-specific finding (not seen in a distinct MG patient subset). As autoantibodies became detectable, myoid cell involvement apparently progressed. Our unifying hypothesis--that an early autoantibody attack on myoid cells provokes local GC formation--helps to resolve many puzzles.


Brain | 2014

Mutations in the SPG7 gene cause chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia through disordered mitochondrial DNA maintenance

Gerald Pfeffer; Grainne S. Gorman; Helen Griffin; Marzena Kurzawa-Akanbi; Emma L. Blakely; Ian Wilson; Kamil S. Sitarz; David Moore; J.L. Murphy; Charlotte L. Alston; Angela Pyle; Jon Coxhead; Brendan Payne; George H. Gorrie; Cheryl Longman; Marios Hadjivassiliou; John McConville; David Dick; Ibrahim Imam; David Hilton; Fiona Norwood; Mark R. Baker; Stephan R. Jaiser; Patrick Yu-Wai-Man; Michael Farrell; Allan McCarthy; Timothy Lynch; Robert McFarland; Andrew M. Schaefer; Douglass M. Turnbull

Progressive external ophthalmoplegia (PEO) is a canonical feature of mitochondrial disease, but in many patients its genetic basis is unknown. Using exome sequencing, Pfeffer et al. identify mutations in SPG7 as an important cause of PEO associated with spasticity and ataxia, and uncover evidence of disordered mtDNA maintenance in patients.


Current Opinion in Pharmacology | 2002

Diseases of the neuromuscular junction.

John McConville; Angela Vincent

The neuromuscular junction is a prototype synapse and it is also the site of well-characterised autoimmune and hereditary disorders. In the presynaptic terminal, voltage-gated potassium channels and voltage-gated calcium channels are subtly altered in genetic disorders and mutations in the enzyme that synthesises acetylcholine have been demonstrated in a particular form of hereditary myasthenia syndrome. Recent advances have revealed agrin, muscle-specific kinase (MuSK) and rapsyn as important signalling elements in the development and maintainance of the molecular architecture of the postsynaptic membrane. This is proving relevant to seronegative myasthenia gravis, with the discovery of anti-MuSK antibodies, and to a type of congenital myasthenic syndrome, in which acetylcholine receptor deficiency is due to mutations in rapsyn.


Human Mutation | 2013

ANO5 gene analysis in a large cohort of patients with anoctaminopathy: confirmation of male prevalence and high occurrence of the common exon 5 gene mutation

A. Sarkozy; Debbie Hicks; J. Hudson; S. Laval; Rita Barresi; David Hilton-Jones; Marcus Deschauer; Elizabeth Harris; Laura E. Rufibach; Esther Hwang; Rumaisa Bashir; Maggie C. Walter; Sabine Krause; Peter Van den Bergh; Isabel Illa; Isabelle Pénisson-Besnier; Liesbeth De Waele; Doug M. Turnbull; M. Guglieri; Bertold Schrank; Benedikt Schoser; Jürgen Seeger; Herbert Schreiber; Dieter Gläser; Michelle Eagle; Geraldine Bailey; Richard Walters; Cheryl Longman; Fiona Norwood; John Winer

Limb girdle muscular dystrophy type 2L or anoctaminopathy is a condition mainly characterized by adult onset proximal lower limb muscular weakness and raised CK values, due to recessive ANO5 gene mutations. An exon 5 founder mutation (c.191dupA) has been identified in most of the British and German LGMD2L patients so far reported. We aimed to further investigate the prevalence and spectrum of ANO5 gene mutations and related clinical phenotypes, by screening 205 undiagnosed patients referred to our molecular service with a clinical suspicion of anoctaminopathy. A total of 42 unrelated patients had two ANO5 mutations (21%), whereas 14 carried a single change. We identified 34 pathogenic changes, 15 of which are novel. The c.191dupA mutation represents 61% of mutated alleles and appears to be less prevalent in non‐Northern European populations. Retrospective clinical analysis corroborates the prevalently proximal lower limb phenotype, the male predominance and absence of major cardiac or respiratory involvement. Identification of cases with isolated hyperCKaemia and very late symptomatic male and female subjects confirms the extension of the phenotypic spectrum of the disease. Anoctaminopathy appears to be one of the most common adult muscular dystrophies in Northern Europe, with a prevalence of about 20%–25% in unselected undiagnosed cases.

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Cheryl Longman

Southern General Hospital

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David Dick

Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital

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John Winer

Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham

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