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Springer, Journal of Neuroimmune Pharmacology, 1(7), p. 253-265, 2011

DOI: 10.1007/s11481-011-9320-5

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Discrepant Effects of Human Interferon-gamma on Clinical and Immunological Disease Parameters in a Novel Marmoset Model for Multiple Sclerosis

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

The core pathogenic process in the common marmoset model of multiple sclerosis (MS) is the activation of memory-like T cells specific for peptide 34 to 56 derived from the extracellular domain of myelin/oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG34-56). Immunization with MOG34-56 in incomplete Freund’s adjuvant is a sufficient stimulus for in vivo activation of these T cells, together with the induction of MS-like disease and CNS pathology. Ex vivo functional characteristics of MOG34-56 specific T cells are specific cytolysis of peptide pulsed target cells and high IL-17A production. To indentify possible functions in this new model of T helper 1 cells, which play a central pathogenic role in MS models induced with complete Freund’s adjuvant, we tested the effect of human interferon-γ (IFNγ) administration during disease initiation of the disease (day 0–25) and around the time of disease expression (psd 56–81). The results show a clear modulatory effect of early IFNγ treatment on humoral and cellular autoimmune parameters, but no generalized mitigating effect on the disease course. These results argue against a prominent pathogenic role of T helper 1 cells in this new marmoset EAE model.