| Literature DB >> 34790199 |
Ute-Christiane Meier1,2, Richard Christopher Cipian3, Abbas Karimi4, Ranjan Ramasamy5, Jaap Michiel Middeldorp6.
Abstract
Roles for viral infections and aberrant immune responses in driving localized neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration in multiple sclerosis (MS) are the focus of intense research. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), as a persistent and frequently reactivating virus with major immunogenic influences and a near 100% epidemiological association with MS, is considered to play a leading role in MS pathogenesis, triggering localized inflammation near or within the central nervous system (CNS). This triggering may occur directly via viral products (RNA and protein) and/or indirectly via antigenic mimicry involving B-cells, T-cells and cytokine-activated astrocytes and microglia cells damaging the myelin sheath of neurons. The genetic MS-risk factor HLA-DR2b (DRB1*1501β, DRA1*0101α) may contribute to aberrant EBV antigen-presentation and anti-EBV reactivity but also to mimicry-induced autoimmune responses characteristic of MS. A central role is proposed for inflammatory EBER1, EBV-miRNA and LMP1 containing exosomes secreted by viable reactivating EBV+ B-cells and repetitive release of EBNA1-DNA complexes from apoptotic EBV+ B-cells, forming reactive immune complexes with EBNA1-IgG and complement. This may be accompanied by cytokine- or EBV-induced expression of human endogenous retrovirus-W/-K (HERV-W/-K) elements and possibly by activation of human herpesvirus-6A (HHV-6A) in early-stage CNS lesions, each contributing to an inflammatory cascade causing the relapsing-remitting neuro-inflammatory and/or progressive features characteristic of MS. Elimination of EBV-carrying B-cells by antibody- and EBV-specific T-cell therapy may hold the promise of reducing EBV activity in the CNS, thereby limiting CNS inflammation, MS symptoms and possibly reversing disease. Other approaches targeting HHV-6 and HERV-W and limiting inflammatory kinase-signaling to treat MS are also being tested with promising results. This article presents an overview of the evidence that EBV, HHV-6, and HERV-W may have a pathogenic role in initiating and promoting MS and possible approaches to mitigate development of the disease.Entities:
Keywords: Epstein-Barr virus; human endogenous retrovirus-W; human herpesvirus-6; inflammatory cascade; molecular mimicry; multiple sclerosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34790199 PMCID: PMC8592026 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.757302
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Overview of the central viral cascade causing dysregulation of immune responses, localized CNS-inflammation and neuronal damage underlying MS-pathogenesis. A central role is proposed for Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), a persistent and frequently reactivating virus, that is associated with Multiple Sclerosis (MS) in genetically susceptible individuals (HLA-DRB*1501). Following (“stress”-induced) EBV reactivation in quiescent latency-I EBV-carrying B-cells in lymphoid tissues near the CNS, EBV-encoded gene products, - such as EBER1, miRNA and LMP1 in exosomes secreted by viable reactivating B-cells (latency-II/-III) and EBNA1-DNA complexes released from apoptotic EBV+ B-cells and possibly forming reactive immune complexes with locally produced anti-EBNA1-IgG -, together trigger anti-viral T-/B-/NK-cell-, antibody- and cytokine responses (Type-I IFN, TNF-α, IL-6, -10, -17A) causing localized inflammation. This is associated with spread of viral products, immune complexes, cytokines and the infiltration of (cross-)? reactive lymphocytes via a compromised blood-brain barrier causing aberrant activation of CNS-resident microglia and astrocytes and damage to oligodendrocytes (ODCs), leading to CNS inflammatory lesions as characteristic feature of MS. EBV itself and inflammatory cytokines may trigger the expression of endogenous germline-encoded viral sequences (MSRV or HERV-K/-W and HHV6A) in reactive lymphocytes and in inflammatory glia/astrocytes/ODC, which further enhance the localized CNS inflammation. In this inflammatory milieu, shared epitopes between (endogenous) viral and neuronal self-antigens may trigger autoimmune responses in susceptible individuals (HLA-DRB*1501), thus perpetuating CNS inflammation and causing pathogenic microglia activation and neuronal damage in an episodic (CIS), recurrent (RRMS) or progressive (SPMS, PPMS) virus-driven and auto-reactive pathogenic process. Interference with virus-driven inflammatory signaling, reconstitution of a quiescent immunological balance, remyelination and repair of damaged neurons are therefore key to future treatment and curative approaches in MS.
Figure 2Processing, presentation and position of EBNA-1 epitopes for CD4+, CD8+ T-cells and antibodies (B-cells). Viable persistent and “reactivating” EBV infected B-cells secrete EBER1 and LMP1 containing exosomes in the head & neck lymphoid microenvironment, continuously activating resident myeloid cells (possibly including microglia and astrocytes) for innate inflammatory signaling and increased antigen-uptake, digestion and presentation. Such innate signals may attract and pre-activate T- and B-cells to the inflammatory site. In EBV carriers, lifelong strong adaptive CD4+ and CD8+ cytotoxic T-cell immunosurveillance exists against replicating latent (Latency-I,-II,-III) and reactivating (Latency-III, Lytic) EBV-infected B-cells recognizing viral peptides bound to surface MHC-I or MHC-II molecules, resulting in release of pro-inflammatory cytokines. This T-cell surveillance is causing repetitive apoptotic cell death of EBV-infected cells and release of nuclear content as apoptotic bodies, enhancing the local inflammatory milieu. Such apoptotic bodies contain EBNA1-DNA (and host protein) complexes which are taken-up by antigen-presenting cells (APC), digested and presented in MHC-II for further CD4+ T-help and cytokine activation. EBNA1-dimers and multimeric EBNA1-DNA complexes also bind to the B-cell receptor (BCR) on B-cells, directly triggering anti-EBNA1 antibody responses, supported by local CD40 T-cell interactions and cytokines (IL4, IL10, IL17A). Prevalent anti-EBNA1 antibodies may form (complement-containing) immune complexes with released EBNA1-dimer/-DNA resulting in Fc-receptor (FcR) uptake into APC’s and processing for MHC-II cross-presentation. Binding to B-cell receptor (IgM-IgD) directly triggers anti-EBNA1 antibody responses and possible anti-self autoimmune responses mediated by EBNA1-bound DNA and host nuclear proteins (i.c. ORC-complex) or via the mimicry domains within the EBNA1 sequence (see ).
Overview of viral proteins involved in antigen mimicry in MS.
| Virus | Viral protein | Self-protein | Nature of cross-reaction | Study | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| EBNA-1 | β-Synuclein | HLA DR2b binding (potentially CD4+ T-cells) | Ramasamy et al. (2020), | ( |
| EBNA-1 | α-Synuclein, CRYAb, MBP, MOG & neurofilament light chain | Cross-reactivity of anti-EBNA1 peptide-specific antibodies with human brain protein extracts and purified brain proteins and identification of sequence homologies | Vertelman & Middeldorp (unpublished), Middeldorp (2015) | ( | |
| EBNA-1 | MBP | Serum antibodies in MS patients | Jog et al. (2020) | ( | |
| EBNA-1 | Mix of myelin proteins | CD4+ T cells | Lünemann et al. (2008) | ( | |
| EBNA-1 | Anoctamin 2 | Antibodies in MS patients | Tengvall et al. (2019) | ( | |
| EBNA-1 | Alpha-B Crystallin (CRYAb) | Serum and CSF antibodies in MS cases | Hecker et al. (2016) | ( | |
| EBNA-1 | hnRNP-L | Serum antibodies in MS | Lindsay et al. (2016) | ( | |
| DNA-polymerase | MBP | CD4+ T-cells | Wucherpfennig & Strominger (1995) | ( | |
| BFRF3 (VCA-p18) | Septin-9 | Antibodies in MS patients | Lindsey (2017) | ( | |
| BRRF2 | Mitochondrial antigens | Serum antibodies in MS | Dooley et al. (2016) | ( | |
| LMP-1 | MBP | CSF antibodies in MS and Mouse immunizations | Lomakin et al. (2017) | ( | |
| LMP-1 | a-Synuclein | Monoclonal antibody on human brain tissue | Woulfe et al. (2016) | ( | |
| Multiple | Multiple | Pentapeptide epitope homology | Kanduc and Shoenfeld, (2020) | ( | |
| BZLF1 | Unknown | CD8+ T-cells in MS brain | Serafini et al. (2019) | ( | |
|
| U24 | MBP | CD4+ T-cells and antibodies in patients | Tejada-Simon et al. (2003) | ( |
|
| env | MOG | HLA DR2b binding (potentially CD4+ T-cells) | Ramasamy et al. (2020) | ( |