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Twin study reveals non-heritable immune perturbations in multiple sclerosis.

Florian IngelfingerLisa Ann GerdesVladyslav KavakaSinduya KrishnarajahEkaterina FriebelEdoardo GalliPascale ZwickyReinhard FurrerChristian PeukertCharles-Antoine DutertreKlara Magdalena EglseerFlorent GinhouxAndrea Flierl-HechtTania KümpfelDonatella De FeoBettina SchreinerSarah MundtMartin KerschensteinerReinhard HohlfeldEduardo BeltránBurkhard Becher
Published in: Nature (2022)
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic inflammatory disorder of the central nervous system underpinned by partially understood genetic risk factors and environmental triggers and their undefined interactions 1,2 . Here we investigated the peripheral immune signatures of 61 monozygotic twin pairs discordant for MS to dissect the influence of genetic predisposition and environmental factors. Using complementary multimodal high-throughput and high-dimensional single-cell technologies in conjunction with data-driven computational tools, we identified an inflammatory shift in a monocyte cluster of twins with MS, coupled with the emergence of a population of IL-2 hyper-responsive transitional naive helper T cells as MS-related immune alterations. By integrating data on the immune profiles of healthy monozygotic and dizygotic twin pairs, we estimated the variance in CD25 expression by helper T cells displaying a naive phenotype to be largely driven by genetic and shared early environmental influences. Nonetheless, the expanding helper T cells of twins with MS, which were also elevated in non-twin patients with MS, emerged independent of the individual genetic makeup. These cells expressed central nervous system-homing receptors, exhibited a dysregulated CD25-IL-2 axis, and their proliferative capacity positively correlated with MS severity. Together, our matched-pair analysis of the extended twin approach allowed us to discern genetically and environmentally determined features of an MS-associated immune signature.
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