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Identification of four novel T cell autoantigens and personal autoreactive profiles in multiple sclerosis

Authors :
Bronge, Mattias
Hogelin, Klara Asplund
Thomas, Olivia G.
Ruhrmann, Sabrina
Carvalho-Queiroz, Claudia
Nilsson, Ola B.
Kaiser, Andreas
Zeitelhofer, Manuel
Holmgren, Erik
Linnerbauer, Mathias
Adzemovic, Milena Z.
Hellström, Cecilia
Jelcic, Ivan
Liu, Hao
Nilsson, Peter
Hillert, Jan
Brundin, Lou
Fink, Katharina
Kockum, Ingrid
Tengvall, Katarina
Martin, Roland
Tegel, Hanna
Gräslund, Torbjörn
Al Nimer, Faiez
Guerreiro-Cacais, Andre Ortlieb
Khademi, Mohsen
Gafvelin, Guro
Olsson, Tomas
Gronlund, Hans
Bronge, Mattias
Hogelin, Klara Asplund
Thomas, Olivia G.
Ruhrmann, Sabrina
Carvalho-Queiroz, Claudia
Nilsson, Ola B.
Kaiser, Andreas
Zeitelhofer, Manuel
Holmgren, Erik
Linnerbauer, Mathias
Adzemovic, Milena Z.
Hellström, Cecilia
Jelcic, Ivan
Liu, Hao
Nilsson, Peter
Hillert, Jan
Brundin, Lou
Fink, Katharina
Kockum, Ingrid
Tengvall, Katarina
Martin, Roland
Tegel, Hanna
Gräslund, Torbjörn
Al Nimer, Faiez
Guerreiro-Cacais, Andre Ortlieb
Khademi, Mohsen
Gafvelin, Guro
Olsson, Tomas
Gronlund, Hans
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an inflammatory disease of the central nervous system (CNS), in which pathological T cells, likely autoimmune, play a key role. Despite its central importance, the autoantigen repertoire remains largely uncharacterized. Using a novel in vitro antigen delivery method combined with the Human Protein Atlas library, we screened for T cell autoreactivity against 63 CNS-expressed proteins. We identified four previously unreported autoantigens in MS: fatty acid-binding protein 7, prokineticin-2, reticulon-3, and synaptosomal-associated protein 91, which were verified to induce interferon-gamma responses in MS in two cohorts. Autoreactive profiles were heterogeneous, and reactivity to several autoantigens was MS-selective. Autoreactive T cells were predominantly CD4(+) and human leukocyte antigen-DR restricted. Mouse immunization induced antigen-specific responses and CNS leukocyte infiltration. This represents one of the largest systematic efforts to date in the search for MS autoantigens, demonstrates the heterogeneity of autoreactive profiles, and highlights promising targets for future diagnostic tools and immunomodulatory therapies in MS.<br />QC 20220524

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1372233423
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126.sciadv.abn1823