Litcius/Paper detail

Treatment with an antigen-specific dual microparticle system reverses advanced multiple sclerosis in mice

Alexander J. Kwiatkowski, Eric Y. Helm, Joshua M. Stewart, Theodore T. Drashansky, Jonathan Cho, Dorina Avram, Benjamin G. Keselowsky

2022Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Antigen-specific therapies hold promise for treating autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis while avoiding the deleterious side effects of systemic immune suppression due to delivering the disease-specific antigen as part of the treatment. In this study, an antigen-specific dual-sized microparticle (dMP) treatment reversed hind limb paralysis when administered in mice with advanced experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). Treatment reduced central nervous system (CNS) immune cell infiltration, demyelination, and inflammatory cytokine levels. Mechanistic insights using single-cell RNA sequencing showed that treatment impacted the MHC II antigen presentation pathway in dendritic cells, macrophages, B cells, and microglia, not only in the draining lymph nodes but also strikingly in the spinal cord. CD74 and cathepsin S were among the common genes down-regulated in most antigen presenting cell (APC) clusters, with B cells also having numerous MHC II genes reduced. Efficacy of the treatment diminished when B cells were absent, suggesting their impact in this therapy, in concert with other immune populations. Activation and inflammation were reduced in both APCs and T cells. This promising antigen-specific therapeutic approach advantageously engaged essential components of both innate and adaptive autoimmune responses and capably reversed paralysis in advanced EAE without the use of a broad immunosuppressant.

Topics & Concepts

Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitisImmunologyImmune systemAntigenAntigen presentationAntigen-presenting cellMultiple sclerosisMedicineT cellAcquired immune systemInflammationBiologyMultiple Sclerosis Research StudiesNeuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration MechanismsImmune Cell Function and Interaction