From bedside to bench: how existing therapies inform the relationship between Epstein–Barr virus and multiple sclerosis

Author:

Dyer Zoe12,Tscharke David3ORCID,Sutton Ian24,Massey Jennifer1245

Affiliation:

1. Blood Stem Cell and Cancer Research Group, St Vincent's Centre for Applied Medical Research Darlinghurst NSW Australia

2. St. Vincent's Clinical School, Faculty of Medicine University of New South Wales (UNSW) Darlinghurst NSW Australia

3. John Curtin School of Medical Research Australian National University Canberra ACT Australia

4. Department of Neurology St Vincent's Clinic Darlinghurst NSW Australia

5. Department of Neurology St Vincent's Hospital Darlinghurst NSW Australia

Abstract

AbstractTherapy for relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis (MS) has advanced dramatically despite incomplete understanding of the cause of the condition. Current treatment involves inducing broad effects on immune cell populations with consequent off‐target side effects, and no treatment can completely prevent disability progression. Further therapeutic advancement will require a better understanding of the pathobiology of MS. Interest in the role of Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) in multiple sclerosis has intensified based on strong epidemiological evidence of an association between EBV seroprevalence and MS. Hypotheses proposed to explain the biological relationship between EBV and MS include molecular mimicry, EBV immortalised autoreactive B cells and infection of glial cells by EBV. Examining the interaction between EBV and immunotherapies that have demonstrated efficacy in MS offers clues to the validity of these hypotheses. The efficacy of B cell depleting therapies could be consistent with a hypothesis that EBV‐infected B cells drive MS; however, loss of T cell control of B cells does not exacerbate MS. A number of MS therapies invoke change in EBV‐specific T cell populations, but pathogenic EBV‐specific T cells with cross‐reactivity to CNS antigen have not been identified. Immune reconstitution therapies induce EBV viraemia and expansion of EBV‐specific T cell clones, but this does not correlate with relapse. Much remains unknown regarding the role of EBV in MS pathogenesis. We discuss future translational research that could fill important knowledge gaps.

Funder

Multiple Sclerosis Research Australia

National Health and Medical Research Council

Neurological Foundation of New Zealand

University of New South Wales

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Nursing,Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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