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Publication : Primary oligodendrocyte death does not elicit anti-CNS immunity.

First Author  Locatelli G Year  2012
Journal  Nat Neurosci Volume  15
Issue  4 Pages  543-50
PubMed ID  22366759 Mgi Jnum  J:191167
Mgi Id  MGI:5461127 Doi  10.1038/nn.3062
Citation  Locatelli G, et al. (2012) Primary oligodendrocyte death does not elicit anti-CNS immunity. Nat Neurosci 15(4):543-50
abstractText  Anti-myelin immunity is commonly thought to drive multiple sclerosis, yet the initial trigger of this autoreactivity remains elusive. One of the proposed factors for initiating this disease is the primary death of oligodendrocytes. To specifically test such oligodendrocyte death as a trigger for anti-CNS immunity, we inducibly killed oligodendrocytes in an in vivo mouse model. Strong microglia-macrophage activation followed oligodendrocyte death, and myelin components in draining lymph nodes made CNS antigens available to lymphocytes. However, even conditions favoring autoimmunity-bystander activation, removal of regulatory T cells, presence of myelin-reactive T cells and application of demyelinating antibodies-did not result in the development of CNS inflammation after oligodendrocyte death. In addition, this lack of reactivity was not mediated by enhanced myelin-specific tolerance. Thus, in contrast with previously reported impairments of oligodendrocyte physiology, diffuse oligodendrocyte death alone or in conjunction with immune activation does not trigger anti-CNS immunity.
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