Gut microbiota from multiple sclerosis patients enables spontaneous autoimmune encephalomyelitis in mice
Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology · University of California, San Francisco · +5 more institutions
Abstract
, an organism shown to induce a protective immunoregulatory profile in vitro. Immune cells from mouse recipients of MS-twin samples produced less IL-10 than immune cells from mice colonized with healthy-twin samples. IL-10 may have a regulatory role in spontaneous CNS autoimmunity, as neutralization of the cytokine in mice colonized with healthy-twin fecal samples increased disease incidence. These findings provide evidence that MS-derived microbiota contain factors that precipitate an MS-like autoimmune disease in a transgenic mouse model. They hence encourage the detailed search for protective and pathogenic microbial components in human MS.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 34.31
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 40
Authors
14Topics & keywords
- Multiple sclerosis
- Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis
- Autoimmunity
- Immunology
- Microbiome
- Biology
- Encephalomyelitis
- Autoimmune disease
- Good health and well-being