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Usage Information

Autoreactive T lymphocytes in multiple sclerosis determined by antigen-induced secretion of interferon-gamma.
T Olsson, W W Zhi, B Höjeberg, V Kostulas, Y P Jiang, G Anderson, H P Ekre, H Link
T Olsson, W W Zhi, B Höjeberg, V Kostulas, Y P Jiang, G Anderson, H P Ekre, H Link
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Research Article

Autoreactive T lymphocytes in multiple sclerosis determined by antigen-induced secretion of interferon-gamma.

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Abstract

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a disease with unknown cause characterized by inflammation and demyelination in the central nervous system. Although an autoimmune pathogenesis has been suggested, there are no conclusive data on the number of T cells autoreactive with myelin antigens in MS compared to controls. We showed that T lymphocytes secreting interferon-gamma in response to possible target autoantigens are severalfold more common among PBL mononuclear cells in patients with MS than in patients with aseptic meningitis and tension headache. On average T cells reactive with myelin basic protein (MBP), two different MBP peptides, or with proteolipid protein amounted to 2.7-5.2/10(5) PBL from MS patients. MBP-reactive T cells were still more frequent among mononuclear cells isolated from the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF; 185/10(5) CSF cells). We concluded that T cells reactive with myelin autoantigens are strongly increased in MS. This approach to detect them could allow definition of immunodominant T cell epitopes in individual MS patients, and thereby enable further development towards specific immunotherapy.

Authors

T Olsson, W W Zhi, B Höjeberg, V Kostulas, Y P Jiang, G Anderson, H P Ekre, H Link

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Usage data is cumulative from January 2025 through January 2026.

Usage JCI PMC
Text version 676 53
PDF 174 15
Scanned page 320 1
Citation downloads 94 0
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Total Views 1,333
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