von Essen Marina Rode, Hansen Marie Mathilde, El Mahdaoui Sahla, Hvalkof Victoria Hyslop, Hansen Rikke Holm, Nielsen Jørgen E, Frederiksen Jette, Sellebjerg Finn
Danish Multiple Sclerosis Center, Department of Neurology, Copenhagen University Hospital - Rigshospitalet, Glostrup, Denmark.
The Neurogenetics Clinic, Danish Dementia Research Center, Copenhagen University Hospital - Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Front Immunol. 2025 May 19;16:1582535. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2025.1582535. eCollection 2025.
Relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) is a chronic immune-mediated disease of the central nervous system (CNS) characterized by episodic relapses of neurological symptoms. Early diagnosis and treatment of patients is key to prevent relapses and irreversible damage to the CNS. However, development of therapies targeting early MS is constrained by the lack of knowledge of early MS disease pathogenesis. In RRMS, nervous tissue damage is induced by CNS-infiltrating immune cells, including T cells. The aim of this study was therefore to investigate the early events of CNS infiltration by T cells in RRMS, including their interaction with astrocytes and brain endothelial cells. Using a human model system and tissue samples obtained from newly diagnosed patients and healthy individuals, we found that CD8CD20 T cells could cross the blood-brain-barrier (BBB) and blood-cerebrospinal fluid-barrier in the absence of inflammation. As CD8CD20 T cells are present in the CNS before inflammation and are highly enriched in MS lesions once the disease is initiated, they may be among the first effector cells in RRMS. Our study also showed that CD4CD20 T cells can stimulate brain endothelial cells to express adhesion molecules and chemokines needed for peripheral immune cells to adhere and migrate through the BBB, and stimulate astrocytes to produce chemokines directing transmigrating cells to the site of inflammation. This suggests that CD4CD20 T cells, once migrated to the CNS, strengthens the infiltration of immune cells to the CNS and hereby amplify CNS inflammation. Altogether, this indicates that CD20 T cells play a role in the early phases of MS-inflammation and therefore are candidate targets for early treatment.
复发缓解型多发性硬化症(RRMS)是一种慢性免疫介导的中枢神经系统(CNS)疾病,其特征为神经症状的发作性复发。对患者进行早期诊断和治疗是预防复发以及中枢神经系统不可逆损伤的关键。然而,针对早期多发性硬化症的治疗方法的开发受到对早期多发性硬化症发病机制认识不足的限制。在复发缓解型多发性硬化症中,包括T细胞在内的中枢神经系统浸润免疫细胞会导致神经组织损伤。因此,本研究的目的是调查复发缓解型多发性硬化症中T细胞浸润中枢神经系统的早期事件,包括它们与星形胶质细胞和脑内皮细胞的相互作用。使用从新诊断患者和健康个体获得的人类模型系统和组织样本,我们发现CD8CD20 T细胞在没有炎症的情况下可以穿过血脑屏障(BBB)和血脑脊液屏障。由于CD8CD20 T细胞在炎症之前就存在于中枢神经系统中,并且一旦疾病发作就在多发性硬化症病变中高度富集,它们可能是复发缓解型多发性硬化症中最早的效应细胞之一。我们的研究还表明,CD4CD20 T细胞可以刺激脑内皮细胞表达外周免疫细胞粘附并穿过血脑屏障所需的粘附分子和趋化因子,并刺激星形胶质细胞产生趋化因子,将迁移细胞引导至炎症部位。这表明CD4CD20 T细胞一旦迁移到中枢神经系统,就会加强免疫细胞向中枢神经系统的浸润,从而放大中枢神经系统炎症。总之,这表明CD20 T细胞在多发性硬化症炎症的早期阶段发挥作用,因此是早期治疗的候选靶点。