Boesch Julian, Ramseier Pamela, Tisserand Sarah, Pierrel Eliane, Locatelli Giuseppe, Summermatter Serge
Diseases Associated with Aging and Regeneration, Biomedical Research, Novartis Pharma AG, Basel, Switzerland.
Immunology Disease Area, Biomedical Research, Novartis Pharma AG, Basel, Switzerland.
Front Neurol. 2025 Apr 8;16:1513501. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2025.1513501. eCollection 2025.
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a neuroinflammatory disease affecting the brain and spinal cord and characterized by demyelination, neurodegeneration and chronic inflammation. More than 90% of people with MS present with peripheral muscle dysfunction and a progressive decline in mobility. Current treatments attenuate the inflammatory processes but do not prevent disease progression. Therefore, there remains an unmet medical need for new and/or additional therapeutic approaches that specifically improve muscle function in this patient population. The development of novel treatments targeting skeletal muscle dysfunction in MS will depend on suitable preclinical models that can mimic the human musculoskeletal manifestations of MS. Using a non-invasive approach to assess muscle function, we demonstrate that Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis (EAE) impairs skeletal muscle strength. Our data reveal a 28.3% ( < 0.0001) lower muscle force in animals with EAE compared to healthy control mice during electrically evoked tetanic muscle contractions that occur at intervals of 0.25 s and thus mimic fatiguing tasks. As we conduct force measurements by direct transcutaneous muscle stimulation in anesthetized animals, our setup allows for the repeated evaluation of muscle function, and in the absence of primary fatigue or reduced nerve input which constitute important confounding factors in MS. Taken together, our data highlight important similarities between MS in humans and EAE in mice with regards to skeletal muscle contractile impairments, and provide first evidence for a non-invasive setup that will enable the preclinical profiling of novel drug candidates directed at specifically improving muscle function in MS.
多发性硬化症(MS)是一种影响大脑和脊髓的神经炎症性疾病,其特征为脱髓鞘、神经退行性变和慢性炎症。超过90%的MS患者存在外周肌肉功能障碍且运动能力逐渐下降。目前的治疗可减轻炎症过程,但无法阻止疾病进展。因此,对于能特异性改善该患者群体肌肉功能的新的和/或额外的治疗方法,仍存在未满足的医疗需求。针对MS骨骼肌功能障碍开发新疗法将依赖于能够模拟MS人类肌肉骨骼表现的合适临床前模型。通过一种非侵入性方法评估肌肉功能,我们证明实验性自身免疫性脑脊髓炎(EAE)会损害骨骼肌力量。我们的数据显示,在以0.25秒间隔进行的电诱发强直肌肉收缩(从而模拟疲劳任务)过程中,与健康对照小鼠相比,患有EAE的动物肌肉力量降低了28.3%(<0.0001)。由于我们在麻醉动物中通过直接经皮肌肉刺激进行力量测量,我们的设置允许对肌肉功能进行重复评估,且不存在构成MS重要混杂因素的原发性疲劳或神经输入减少的情况。综上所述,我们的数据突出了人类MS和小鼠EAE在骨骼肌收缩功能障碍方面的重要相似性,并为一种非侵入性设置提供了首个证据,该设置将能够对旨在特异性改善MS肌肉功能的新型候选药物进行临床前分析。