Abstract

Lymphocytes and innate immune cells are key drivers of multiple sclerosis (MS) and are the main target of MS disease-modifying therapies (DMT). Ex vivo analyses of MS lesions have revealed cellular heterogeneity and variable T cell levels, which may have important implications for patient stratification and choice of DMT. Although MRI has proven valuable to monitor DMT efficacy, its lack of specificity for cellular subtypes highlights the need for complementary methods to improve lesion characterization. Here, we evaluated the potential of 2'-deoxy-2'-18F-fluoro-9-β-d-arabinofuranosylguanine (18F-FAraG) PET imaging to noninvasively assess infiltrating T cells and to provide, in combination with MRI, a novel tool to determine lesion types. Methods: We used a novel MS mouse model that combines cuprizone and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis to reproducibly induce 2 brain inflammatory lesion types, differentiated by their T cell content. 18F-FAraG PET imaging, T2-weighted MRI, and T1-weighted contrast-enhanced MRI were performed before disease induction, during demyelination with high levels of innate immune cells, and after T cell infiltration. Fingolimod immunotherapy was used to evaluate the ability of PET and MRI to detect therapy response. Ex vivo immunofluorescence analyses for T cells, microglia/macrophages, myelin, and blood-brain barrier (BBB) integrity were performed to validate the invivo findings. Results:18F-FAraG signal was significantly increased in the brain and spinal cord at the time point of T cell infiltration. 18F-FAraG signal from white matter (corpus callosum) and gray matter (cortex, hippocampus) further correlated with T cell density. T2-weighted MRI detected white matter lesions independently of T cells. T1-weighted contrast-enhanced MRI indicated BBB disruption at the time point of T cell infiltration. Fingolimod treatment prevented motor deficits and decreased T cell and microglia/macrophage levels. In agreement, 18F-FAraG signal was decreased in the brain and spinal cord of fingolimod-treated mice; T1-weighted contrast-enhanced MRI revealed intact BBB, whereas T2-weighted MRI findings remained unchanged. Conclusion: The combination of MRI and 18F-FAraG PET enables detection of inflammatory demyelination and T cell infiltration in an MS mouse model, providing a new way to evaluate lesion heterogeneity during disease progression and after DMT. On clinical translation, these methods hold great potential for stratifying patients, monitoring MS progression, and determining therapy responses.

Highlights

  • Adaptive and innate immune cells play a critical role in the onset and progression of multiple sclerosis (MS) [1]

  • We evaluated the ability of 18F-FAraG positron emission tomography (PET) to detect response to Fingolimod, a disease modifying therapies (DMT) which limits the infiltration of T-cells into the CNS [16]

  • These results indicate that 18F-FAraG accumulates in the brain and crosses the intact blood brain barrier (BBB) in mice

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Summary

Introduction

Adaptive and innate immune cells play a critical role in the onset and progression of multiple sclerosis (MS) [1]. Evidence from histopathology analysis of brain tissue indicate that lesions are heterogeneous and T-cell concentrations are highly variable at sites of active demyelination [3,4,5,6,7]. T1-weighted contrast-enhanced MRI and T2-weighted MRI can assess blood brain barrier (BBB) integrity and demyelination and/or inflammation, respectively, but are unable to inform on immune cell types presence [1,9]. Imaging of immune cells would improve our understanding of lesion progression across the course of MS, and most importantly, allow for proper stratification of patients and optimized choice of therapeutic regimen

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