CD8+ T Cells Cause Disability and Axon Loss in a Mouse Model of Multiple Sclerosis

C Deb, RG LaFrance-Corey, WF Schmalstieg… - PloS one, 2010 - journals.plos.org
C Deb, RG LaFrance-Corey, WF Schmalstieg, BM Sauer, H Wang, CL German
PloS one, 2010journals.plos.org
Background The objective of this study was to test the hypothesis that CD8+ T cells directly
mediate motor disability and axon injury in the demyelinated central nervous system. We
have previously observed that genetic deletion of the CD8+ T cell effector molecule perforin
leads to preservation of motor function and preservation of spinal axons in chronically
demyelinated mice. Methodology/Principal Findings To determine if CD8+ T cells are
necessary and sufficient to directly injure demyelinated axons, we adoptively transferred …
Background
The objective of this study was to test the hypothesis that CD8+ T cells directly mediate motor disability and axon injury in the demyelinated central nervous system. We have previously observed that genetic deletion of the CD8+ T cell effector molecule perforin leads to preservation of motor function and preservation of spinal axons in chronically demyelinated mice.
Methodology/Principal Findings
To determine if CD8+ T cells are necessary and sufficient to directly injure demyelinated axons, we adoptively transferred purified perforin-competent CD8+ spinal cord-infiltrating T cells into profoundly demyelinated but functionally preserved perforin-deficient host mice. Transfer of CD8+ spinal cord-infiltrating T cells rapidly and irreversibly impaired motor function, disrupted spinal cord motor conduction, and reduced the number of medium- and large-caliber spinal axons. Likewise, immunodepletion of CD8+ T cells from chronically demyelinated wildtype mice preserved motor function and limited axon loss without altering other disease parameters.
Conclusions/Significance
In multiple sclerosis patients, CD8+ T cells outnumber CD4+ T cells in active lesions and the number of CD8+ T cells correlates with the extent of ongoing axon injury and functional disability. Our findings suggest that CD8+ T cells may directly injure demyelinated axons and are therefore a viable therapeutic target to protect axons and motor function in patients with multiple sclerosis.
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