Abstract

Cortical demyelination is a widely recognized hallmark of multiple sclerosis (MS) and correlate of disease progression and cognitive decline. The pathomechanisms initiating and driving gray matter damage are only incompletely understood. Here, we determined the infiltrating leukocyte subpopulations in 26 cortical demyelinated lesions of biopsied MS patients and assessed their contribution to cortical lesion formation in a newly developed mouse model. We find that conformation-specific anti-myelin antibodies contribute to cortical demyelination even in the absence of the classical complement pathway. T cells and natural killer cells are relevant for intracortical type 2 but dispensable for subpial type 3 lesions, whereas CCR2+ monocytes are required for both. Depleting CCR2+ monocytes in marmoset monkeys with experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis using a novel humanized CCR2 targeting antibody translates into significantly less cortical demyelination and disease severity. We conclude that biologics depleting CCR2+ monocytes might be attractive candidates for preventing cortical lesion formation and ameliorating disease progression in MS.

Highlights

  • The cortex is a major predilection site for demyelination in multiple sclerosis (MS) [18]

  • In our cohort of 740 biopsied patients with inflammatory white matter demyelination compatible with MS, 26 patients harbored subpial cortical demyelinated lesions, which extended from the subpial area to layers V–VI, reflecting 19% of the patients where cortex was available for microscopic analysis (Supplemental Fig. 1)

  • The cerebral cortex is a major site of disease-related pathology in MS, whereby subpial cortical regions are the most frequently and intensely affected

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The cortex is a major predilection site for demyelination in multiple sclerosis (MS) [18]. MRI studies have consistently demonstrated that gray matter atrophy reflects disability progression better than white matter atrophy or T2 lesion load, suggesting that cortical pathology plays a pivotal role in disease progression [12]. Degenerative processes have been proposed to prevail in cortical pathology. This view has been challenged by biopsy studies of cortical demyelinated lesions, which were highly inflammatory [32] and by animal studies demonstrating the rapid resolution of cortical inflammation [35]. Meningeal inflammatory cells might release myelino- and neurotoxic soluble mediators, which diffuse into the superficial gray matter, contributing to demyelination and the reported gradient of neuronal damage [33]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call