Identifying the dangers of chronic stress on multiple sclerosis
February 6, 2018, Hokkaido University
Credit: Hokkaido University
New research reveals how chronic stress and tiny brain inflammations cause fatal gut failure in a multiple sclerosis mouse model.
A newly discovered nerve pathway facilitates fatal gut failure in a multiple sclerosis (MS) mouse model placed under chronic stress, Hokkaido University researchers report in the journal eLife. The findings could provide a new therapeutic strategy for MS, an intractable, currently untreatable disease.
MS affects an estimated 2.5 million people worldwide and causes motor dysfunction, impaired vision and gut failure. It is an autoimmune condition of the central nervous system mediated by immune cells called autoreactive CD4+ T cells.
These pathogenic CD4+ T cells can be used to induce an MS-like disease in research mice. In previous studies using these mouse models, Masaaki Murakami of Hokkaido University and his colleagues found that autoreactive CD4+ T cells cross the blood-brain barrier at specific sites causing brain and spinal cord inflammation.
In the present study, the team and their collaborators in Japan and Germany investigated the possible relationships between micro-inflammation in the brain, chronic stress and stress-related organ failure.
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