Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

STUDY: Diminished Th17 (not Th1) responses underlie MS disease abrogation after HSCT

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • STUDY: Diminished Th17 (not Th1) responses underlie MS disease abrogation after HSCT

    Ann Neurol. 2012 Oct 11. doi: 10.1002/ana.23784. [Epub ahead of print]

    Diminished Th17 (not Th1) responses underlie multiple sclerosis disease
    abrogation after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.


    Darlington PJ, Touil T, Doucet JS, Gaucher D, Zeidan J, Gauchat D, Corsini R, Kim
    HJ, Duddy M, Jalili F, Arbour N, Kebir H, Chen J, Arnold DL, Bowman M, Antel J,
    Prat A, Freedman MS, Atkins H, Sekaly R, Cheynier R, Bar-Or A; for the Canadian
    MS/BMT Study Group.

    Neuroimmunology Unit, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University,
    Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

    OBJECTIVE: To define changes in phenotype and functional responses of
    reconstituting T cells in patients with aggressive multiple sclerosis (MS)
    treated with ablative chemotherapy and autologous hematopoietic stem cell
    transplantation (HSCT).

    METHODS: Clinical and brain magnetic resonance imaging
    measures of disease activity were monitored serially in patients participating in
    the Canadian MS HSCT Study. Reconstitution kinetics of immune-cell subsets were
    determined by flow cytometry, whereas thymic function was assessed using T-cell
    receptor excision circle analyses as well as flow cytometry measurements of CD31+
    recent thymic emigrants (RTEs). Functional assays were performed to track central
    nervous system-autoreactive antigen-specific T-cell responses, and the relative
    capacity to generate Th1, Th17, or Th1/17 T-cell responses.

    RESULTS: Complete
    abrogation of new clinical relapses and new focal inflammatory brain lesions
    throughout the 2 years of immune monitoring following treatment was associated
    with sustained decrease in naive T cells, in spite of restoration of both thymic
    function and release of RTEs during reconstitution. Re-emergence as well as in
    vivo expansion of autoreactive T cells to multiple myelin targets was evident in
    all patients studied. The reconstituted myelin-specific T cells exhibited the
    same Th1 and Th2 responses as preablation myelin-reactive T cells. In contrast,
    the post-therapy T-cell repertoire exhibited a significantly diminished capacity
    for Th17 responses.

    INTERPRETATION: Our results indicate that diminished Th17 and
    Th1/17 responses, rather than Th1 responses, are particularly relevant to the
    abrogation of new relapsing disease activity observed in this cohort of patients
    with aggressive MS following chemoablation and HSCT. ANN NEUROL 2012;
    Dave Bexfield
    ActiveMSers

  • #2
    Dave,
    I hope you understand all that stuff.
    Is it good or bad ? or can you explain in plain English.
    Thanks
    Alain

    Comment


    • #3
      Ha, I have no idea, Alain. I just post the research. I imagine someone will parse these results and make sense of it all....
      Dave Bexfield
      ActiveMSers

      Comment

      Working...
      X