Literature DB >> 9745761

Do microbes with peptides mimicking myelin cause multiple sclerosis if the T cell response to their unique peptides is limited?

M D Kaufman1.   

Abstract

This hypothesis for the pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis is based upon assumptions about the response of the T cell repertoire to pathogens. Immunologic and epidemiologic observations of several conditions suggest that activation of T cells formed in early life mediate injury to the central nervous system. Early in life, selection of lymphocytes by the thymus produces a weakly autoreactive T cell repertoire which, with the help of transient maternally-derived defenses, recognizes pathogens. These responses later are supplemented by pathogen-specific responses, acquired as microbes are encountered. As the thymus involutes, the diversity of pathogen-specific responses to microbial epitopes is progressively fixed. Reduced and delayed pathogen exposure, common in developed societies, limits the repertoire of memory T cells, which can efficiently eliminate pathogens. Due to their small number, pathogen-specific lymphocytes which mature extrathymically may not be able to rapidly eliminate most pathogens, and without the editing of the thymus, they may be autoreactive. In this setting, novel pathogens with epitopes mimicking myelin may elicit a T cell response which is autoreactive. Peptides of common microbes are known to activate T cells recognizing dominant antigens of myelin. It is postulated that at the equator, intense, non-seasonal encounters with microbes elicit an immune repertoire that produces resistance to autoimmunity, while, in temperate climates, moderate, seasonal exposures increase susceptibility to it. The differences in responses to microbes between populations with a low or high prevalence of multiple sclerosis suggests that T cell repertoires are divergent in these groups. An exuberant innate response, postulated to diminish as the load of enteric microbes falls and sanitation improves in relation to the distance from the equator, may increase resistance to multiple sclerosis by eliminating the need for T cell activation. Human herpesvirus-6 and respiratory syncytial virus are possible prototypes of microbes which activate myelin-directed T cells.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9745761     DOI: 10.1006/jtbi.1998.0734

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Theor Biol        ISSN: 0022-5193            Impact factor:   2.691


  3 in total

1.  Expression of myelin basic protein (MBP) epitopes in human non-neural cells revealed by two anti-MBP IgM monoclonal antibodies.

Authors:  R Chignola; T Cestari; C Guerriero; A P Riviera; S Ferrari; A Brendolan; M Gobbo; S Amato; S Sartoris; G Fracasso; M G Liuzzi; P Riccio; G Tridente; G Andrighetto
Journal:  Clin Exp Immunol       Date:  2000-12       Impact factor: 4.330

2.  "2-6-11" motif in heat shock protein 60 and central nervous system antigens: a preliminary study in multiple sclerosis patients.

Authors:  E Ruiz-Vázquez; P de Castro
Journal:  J Physiol Biochem       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 4.158

3.  T-cell activation is an immune correlate of risk in BCG vaccinated infants.

Authors:  Helen A Fletcher; Margaret A Snowden; Bernard Landry; Wasima Rida; Iman Satti; Stephanie A Harris; Magali Matsumiya; Rachel Tanner; Matthew K O'Shea; Veerabadran Dheenadhayalan; Leah Bogardus; Lisa Stockdale; Leanne Marsay; Agnieszka Chomka; Rachel Harrington-Kandt; Zita-Rose Manjaly-Thomas; Vivek Naranbhai; Elena Stylianou; Fatoumatta Darboe; Adam Penn-Nicholson; Elisa Nemes; Mark Hatherill; Gregory Hussey; Hassan Mahomed; Michele Tameris; J Bruce McClain; Thomas G Evans; Willem A Hanekom; Thomas J Scriba; Helen McShane
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2016-04-12       Impact factor: 14.919

  3 in total

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