Jonathan Edwards
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Do you think there is some sort of interesting direct antibody interaction with synapses/nerve cells or instead something more mediated through NK cells or complement or something else?
Jo C, Jackie Cliff and I are trying to make sense of this question and I hope we will put out what we currently can argue very shortly.
The effector mechanism in ME/CFS for producing symptoms is very puzzling. ME/CFS is an acquired condition and can come on suddenly. The evidence for linkage to MHC (here HLA-C) is wobbly but the best way to explain the onset is a shift in adaptive immune cell populations. In other words an expansion of some B cell clones or expansion of a T cell population - which might be clones with a specific T cell receptor but could be a whole compartment like NK or MAIT (Jackie's interest). These do not have antigen-specific clones in quite the same way but there may be populations with specific epigenetic changes.
Antibody mediated effector mechanisms as in classical autoimmunity tend to be symmetrical or diffuse - since the pathology is mediated at a molecular level. T cell mediated processes like psoriasis tend to be more patchy, being mediated by clusters of T cells. In ME/CFS the mechanism looks to be diffuse but it is not obviously a tissue specific pattern (type 2 hypersensitivity) or an immune complex pattern (type 3). Moreover, symptoms can change over hours and autoantibody mediated mechanism are very unlikely to change over hours.
The suggestion we are going to make is that antibody is involved but indirectly. And the B cell clones making the antibody may not be in themselves unusual or pathological, but may be more prominent in females. These antibodies engage with an interaction between some expanded T cell population and macrophages, which will involve cell clustering but which produces diffuse symptoms because it is mediated by cytokine-nerve interactions.
I personally doubt that NK cells are the culprits. Although low NK numbers have been reported in ME/CFS you do not have symptoms in ME/CFS similar to NK cell deficiencies. And whatever cells are the problem we would expect more of them. I suspect the NK cells are low because of a feedback negative signal from TGF beta and GDF15 downstream of some other signal.
Our current suggestion is very likely wrong but the point of writing was to discuss the case for and against these options. I suspect that over the coming year we will be able to gather information that will point much more clearly to one option or another. And now that we are pretty sure that there is an error of adaptive immunity and the nerve cells are involved there is hope of funding of new sorts of projects that will clarify things further.