Bacterial Toxin Unveiled as the Culprit Behind Multiple Sclerosis Onset

imhotep

Well-known member
  • Mar 29, 2017
    14,833
    8
    35,354
    113

    Epsilon toxin-producing Clostridium perfringens colonize the MS gut and epsilon toxin overcomes immune privilege.​


    A specific toxin-producing gut bacteria may be responsible for both triggering the onset of multiple sclerosis (MS) and ongoing disease activity, according to a new study led by a team of researchers at Weill Cornell Medicine and NewYork-Presbyterian.

    The team is working with investigators from Cornell’s Ithaca campus as well as the University of California, San Diego; the University of California, Davis, and the University of Pittsburgh; and has a long-standing collaboration with scientists at the Rockefeller University.

    The work, published Feb. 28 in the Journal of Clinical Investigation, identifies epsilon toxin-producing Clostridium perfringens in unusually high abundance within the gut microbiome of people with MS. The study goes on to show that in a preclinical model of MS, epsilon toxin opens the blood vessels of the brain allowing inflammatory cells to gain access to the central nervous system and cause demyelination characteristic of MS.
    “There are many mysteries to MS,” said co-senior author Dr. Timothy Vartanian, a professor of neuroscience in the Feil Family Brain and Mind Research Institute at Weill Cornell Medicine. “Why do some people get MS and others don’t, despite similar or identical genetics? What accounts for the episodic nature of relapses and remissions? How is the central nervous system targeted and why myelin specifically?Clostridium perfringens and epsilon toxin may explain many of these mysteries.”

    An environmental trigger is required for MS to occur in a genetically susceptible individual, and the abundance of epsilon toxin-producing Clostridium perfringens in people with MS suggests it could be the culprit. Epsilon toxin-producing strains of Clostridium perfringens live in the small intestine, and epsilon toxin is only produced briefly when the bacterium is in a growth phase, fitting with the relapsing remitting nature of MS. Perhaps most remarkably, epsilon toxin specifically targets brain blood vessels and myelin, providing a clear mechanism of its action.

    Despite the mounting evidence that epsilon toxin-producing strains of Clostridium perfringens could be relevant environmental pathogens for MS, modern studies of the gut microbiome in people with the disease failed to detect these strains. In the current study, Yinghua Ma, an assistant professor of research in neuroscience in the Vartanian lab, led work, along with co-lead authors David Sannino and Jennifer Linden in the Brain and Mind Research Institute, showing that more sensitive techniques readily detected these strains in the MS gut microbiome.

    “Previous studies would use a method where you could see the bacterial species that are there, but you couldn’t actually see the toxin or some of the more functionally relevant parts of the species,” said co-senior author Christopher Mason, a professor of physiology and biophysics and co-director of the WorldQuant Initiative for Quantitative Prediction at Weill Cornell Medicine.

    Using highly sensitive DNA detection techniques, Ma found that people with MS are more likely to carry epsilon toxin-producing C. perfringens in their small intestines than healthy controls.

    “The team brought the full armamentarium of modern molecular biology to address the question of pathogenesis and possible drivers of multiple sclerosis,” said Mason, who is also a professor of neuroscience in the Brain and Mind Research Institute at Weill Cornell Medicine. Having established this correlation, the investigators tested whether the toxin alone could cause the disease.

    For that, they turned to a standard mouse model of MS in which animals are predisposed to autoimmunity, but MS-like disease only occurs if mice are also given pertussis toxin. Ma substituted epsilon toxin for pertussis toxin and animals developed a disease that more closely resembled MS compared to previous models.

    “The finding that epsilon toxin can replace pertussis toxin in a mouse model of MS is very exciting,” said co-author Gregory F. Sonnenberg, the Henry R. Erle, M.D.-Roberts Family Associate Professor of Medicine and a member of the Jill Roberts Institute for Research in Inflammatory Bowel Disease at Weill Cornell Medicine. “It not only advances a more relevant model to study MS, but critically defines a new microbial-derived determinant that provokes a breakdown of immune privilege in the central nervous system to initiate demyelinating disease.”

    “Epsilon toxin functions at the very earliest stage of MS lesion formation,” said Vartanian, who is also chief of the Multiple Sclerosis and Neuro-Immunology Division in the Department of Neurology at Weill Cornell Medicine and a neurologist at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center. “A treatment that neutralizes epsilon toxin may halt our patients’ new disease activity, far more effectively than current treatment modalities that suppress or modulate the immune system.”

    “In the immediate term, we’re driven by a sense of urgency to get more effective and safer therapeutics to people with MS,” Vartanian said.

    MS_findings.jpg


    PS: Previously in 2014, the Weill Cornell scientists added to the growing body of evidence that a potential trigger of multiple sclerosis could be a toxin produced by common food borne bacteria.
     

    Stimulus mind

    Well-known member
  • Feb 27, 2021
    30,847
    152,528
    113
    කාලෙකට පස්සෙ අහන්න ලැබුණු හොද ආරංචියක්.:love: MS ගැන කරන ඔය පරීක්ෂණ සාර්ථක වෙලා ඔය රෝගෙ නිට්ටාවටම සුව කරන්න පුළුවන් ඖෂධයක් නුදුරු අනාගතේදිම හොයාගන්න ලැබෙන්න කියලා ප්‍රාර්ථනා කරනවා!!! :)
     

    imhotep

    Well-known member
  • Mar 29, 2017
    14,833
    8
    35,354
    113
    One of my closest was diagnosed with this disease last year. Good news if we have a cure. Doctors recommend Tysabri which is high in side effects and we didn't do it. Attempting to control the attacks with food habits.
    It;s a monoclonal antibody used to treat MS and Crohn's disease. If this finding is correct then the scientists will have a better way to develop a drug with less side effects and effective as @Stimulus mind commented.
     

    imhotep

    Well-known member
  • Mar 29, 2017
    14,833
    8
    35,354
    113
    So this may be why some people claim that some genetically related diseases have subsided or been cured by some alternative medicine that is thought to have no cure in western medicine. So this finding will shape future approaches to finding cures for some genetically related diseases.
    What about those where MS goes into remission on it's own? There are people who have very minor or no symptoms for months and several years. Of course, what's called a Flare-Up is always possible.
    Some claim herbs work while other claim it's the diet - but these are only case specific. Not valid with the overall population with MS.
    Have you seen anywhere well documented case studies with any of these alternative medicine promoters?

    MS really does not really belong to a classical autoimmune disease, and it's identified as an immune-mediated disease. So all the therapeutic approach was with using drugs that interfered with the activation of T cells, turning down the inflammation and immune activity, blocking the movement of immune system cells, depleting the numbers of immune system cells and also limiting entry of immune cells into the CNS.
    Now a different approach can be considered and trialled out.

    World-wide the MS incidence has increased. Here's a recent map done 2020.

    MS_Map.jpg


    PS: Ethnically, the Iniut Indians, the Maoris and the Pacific Islanders have the lowest incidence in MS. It's supposedly low in Central Africas too but lacks solid supporting data.
     
    • Like
    Reactions: Asmodeus and NRTG

    RealityOfX

    Well-known member
  • Feb 5, 2021
    8,576
    1
    14,691
    113
    What about those where MS goes into remission on it's own? There are people who have very minor or no symptoms for months and several years. Of course, what's called a Flare-Up is always possible.
    Some claim herbs work while other claim it's the diet - but these are only case specific. Not valid with the overall population with MS.
    Have you seen anywhere well documented case studies with any of these alternative medicine promoters?

    MS really does not really belong to a classical autoimmune disease, and it's identified as an immune-mediated disease. So all the therapeutic approach was with using drugs that interfered with the activation of T cells, turning down the inflammation and immune activity, blocking the movement of immune system cells, depleting the numbers of immune system cells and also limiting entry of immune cells into the CNS.
    Now a different approach can be considered and trialled out.

    World-wide the MS incidence has increased. Here's a recent map done 2020.

    View attachment 201587

    PS: Ethnically, the Iniut Indians, the Maoris and the Pacific Islanders have the lowest incidence in MS. It's supposedly low in Central Africas too but lacks solid supporting data.

    https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fneur.2021.765954/full

    There are some connections with covid vaccine too.