Search for:
Search for:
Healthcare Professionals
Publications
Contact
News
Español
Magazine
Radio
*
INFÓRMESE
¿Qué es EM?
Un trastorno neurológico crónico que afecta el sistema nervioso central, compuesto por el cerebro...
Más detalles
MATERIALES EDUCATIVOS
PREGUNTAS COMUNES
Lending Library
Symptoms
Treatment Options
Additional Resources
INVESTIGACIÓN
MS Awareness Month
DONAR
OBTENGA AYUDA
Programa de Salud y Bi...
Obtenga materiales educativos y referencias así como también la oportunidad de participar en...
Más información
Grants & Programs
Awareness Campaigns
GRUPOS DE APOYO
Events
Lending Library
Additional Resources
PARTICIPE
Mes de Concientización...
Una campaña anual a nivel nacional con objetivos para promover la comprensión de la EM y ayudar a...
Más información
Advocacy
COMPRAS A SOCIOS
VOLUNTARIO
Businesses
MS Research Trials
Outreach
Supporter Program
Awareness Campaigns
Host an Event
Events
Awareness Month 2025
In this program we’ll navigate through the available treatment options and look at what the...
Learn more
Events Calendar
Health & Wellness
Fundraisers
Support
Web & Teleconferences
MS Education
Host an Event
QUIÉNES SOMOS
Programas y Subvenciones
Más detalles
Overview
Press Room
LIDERAZGO
Healthcare Advisory Board
ESTADOS FINANCIEROS
NUESTRA MISIÓN
Careers at MS Focus
Affiliations
Transportation Assista...
Helping members remain as independent as possible, and ensuring all people with MS have the...
/Get-Help/MSF-Programs-Grants/Transportation-Assistance-Grant
Shop
Privacy
Terms of Use
Site Map
Study helps make clear distinctions between MS, MOGAD
febrero 28, 2023
A new study set out to assess potentially distinct immune mechanisms underlying multiple sclerosis and myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein-associated disease. The findings point to distinct features of circulating cellular immune profiles in children with MS and MOG-associated disease and provides novel insights into early immune mechanisms that may be involved in each of these conditions.
Approximately 20 to 30 percent of children with acquired inflammatory demyelinating syndromes have MS. Another 30 percent harbor antibodies against MOGAD. While MS and MOGAD can have similar features, differences in response to immune therapies point to distinct underlying immune mechanisms.
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania, the Center for Applied Genomics at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, McGill University, in Montreal, the Hospital for Sick Children, in Toronto, and the University of Manitoba, in Winnipeg, analyzed blood cells collected from patients with ADS prior to the application of immune therapy, as well as from healthy controls. CITE-Seq profiling recovered a total of 104,200 single cells with equal contribution from 24 children (six healthy donors; six with ADS but neither MS nor MOGAD; six with MOGAD; and six with MS, ascertained with long-term follow-up).
Comparative analyses revealed features within the T-cell compartment that differed between children with MS and MOGAD. Specifically:
When compared to MOGAD, the CD4 T-cell compartment in children with MS was enriched for a memory population with a Th1-like phenotype and enriched for a Th17-like memory population expressing surface components for VLA-4.
When compared to MOGAD, within the CD8 compartment, CD8 effector T cells in children with MS were enriched for the checkpoint-molecule TIGIT.
Finally, when compared to MS, CD8+ and CD4+ T cell populations in children with MOGAD were enriched for transcriptional signatures linked to interferon responses.
The study was presented at the 2023 ACTRIMS forum.
[Error loading the control 'FeaturedNews', check event log for more details]