This is certainly interesting work, particularly the new, unpublished findings about the “exhausted CD8 T cells signature” of PD-1 and transcription factors. And I like the way that it builds from the early metabolic work into the flow cytometry stuff and the link into the single-cell RNA work.
But I don’t think we should get carried away. Maureen Hansen herself does a good job of not hyping it.
The findings do not point specifically to a chronic viral infection
First, there is no evidence that points specifically to chronic viral infection. CD8 T -cell exhaustion is not specific to viruses, or even pathogens (later in the talk, she talks about T-cell exhaustion in cancer). And as she says, monocyte activation is a sign of an unseen pathogen, but it doesn’t have to be a virus.
Surprisingly small samples
Next, the studies have Surprisingly small sample sizes, particularly given this is one of the biggest ME labs. It’s only 15 patients for the new work, which is pretty much a pilot study. There are only 30 patients for the very interesting single-cell RNA sequencing work. I hope there will be replication studies with larger samples.
It’s surprising that the CD8 T-cells differences don’t stand out in the RNA data
I’m concerned that the (already-published) single-cell RNA sequencing work found the biggest differences between patients and control for monocytes. You would think from the new flow cytometry results that a similar CD8 T-cell signal would shine out like a beaco from the scRNA data, yet that appears not to be the case (I'm fairly sure that substantial CD8 differences were not reported in that study).
The idea of single-cell RNA sequencing is it identifies all the RNA transcripts in a cell and from that it’s straightforward to deduce which proteins are being made (that’s how different immune cells such as monocytes are identified). I would expect the PD-1 marker and the transcription factors to also show up in the data, with corresponding differences between patients and controls.
Can chronic virus infection explain PEM?
At the end of the talk, a patient asks what I think is the key question: how do these findings relate to PEM? Maureen Henson said she didn’t know (I like scientists who are happy to say that).
If the key problem here is chronic infection and T-cell exhaustion, why don’t we see PEM in chronic infections? I’m fairly sure it’s not a feature of hepatitis C infection or AIDS, for instance – though chronic fatigue certainly is.
In short, we have small sample sizes, inconsistent findings, and no sign of PEM in other chronic conditions that are supposed to have a lot of similarities.
I very much hope that Maureen Hansen and her team will pursue this work. These findings may develop into a massive clue about the cause of the illness.
But we should be realistic about the current evidence and how much weight it will bear.
It would be very interesting to hear
@Jonathan Edwards's opinion on this work.