Multiple sclerosis (MS) is considered to be a disease controlled by the T cell, a type of white blood cell.
Research has shown that in MS, T cells inappropriately attack myelin, the protective layer of fat covering nerves in the central nervous system, exposing them to damage.
Emerging studies have also discovered that B cells, another type of white blood cells that had previously been overlooked in MS, are significant contributors to the disease.
But how B cells contribute to the disease and the molecular mechanisms involved in the benefit of BCDT has not been fully elucidated.
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The new study by researchers of the Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital of McGill University provides groundbreaking insight into the role of B cells and their interaction with other immune cells in the context of MS.
"We've recently discovered that different types of human B cells exist. Some B cells have been shown to promote inflammation, while others are actually able to limit inflammation," said senior author Amit Bar-Or, from the Montreal Neurological Institute.
The study first examined samples of MS patients, comparing them to healthy subjects. Researchers discovered that GM-CSF producing B cells were more frequent and more prone to activation in MS patients.
This subset of B cells activated pro-inflammatory responses of myeloid cells of the immune system.
Confirming these results in patients, the researchers found that after BCDT, the myeloid cells became much less pro-inflammatory, suggesting that BCDT may work in part by decreasing the number of GM-CSF-producing B cells and in turn limiting both myeloid cell and T cell contribution to new disease activity.
"Furthermore, better identifying the particular subset of B cells responsible for new disease activity, we can look forward to more selectively targeting the "bad" B cells while leaving "good" B cells intact," researchers said.
The study was published in the journal of Science Translational Medicine.