Jonathan Edwards
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Link to the thread on the preprint - 27 May 2025:
A Proposed Mechanism for ME/CFS Invoking Macrophage Fc-gamma-RI and Interferon Gamma, 2025, Edwards, Cambridge and Cliff
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I am hoping that the paper I have been writing with Jo Cambridge and Jackie Cliff will appear on Qeios tomorrow. If there are glitches it may be Monday.
There is nothing in this that should be too unexpected for S4ME members. I have suggested a possible mechanistic framework for ME/CFS that includes a role for both antibodies and T cells. Those roles are rather different from typical autoimmunity but then each autoimmune disease is a bit different. We focus on a receptor called FcRI. That could well be wrong but it provides a story that seems to make sense.
Jo Cambridge has been involved in the evolution of this for a long time. Jackie Cliff was asked to help on the T cell side and did a great job pulling that aspect together. This isn't specifically her preferred theory, but then I wouldn't say it was for Jo and I either. It is an exercise in seeing how one could make a testable theory that accounted for all the salient facts.
We have deliberately put this out with a reference to DecodeME results being expected soon. The idea is to stimulate debate by seeing to what extent those results fit with or test existing ideas.
Sorry not to actually post the paper here but this is to reassure people that it really is about to appear!
A Proposed Mechanism for ME/CFS Invoking Macrophage Fc-gamma-RI and Interferon Gamma, 2025, Edwards, Cambridge and Cliff
******
I am hoping that the paper I have been writing with Jo Cambridge and Jackie Cliff will appear on Qeios tomorrow. If there are glitches it may be Monday.
There is nothing in this that should be too unexpected for S4ME members. I have suggested a possible mechanistic framework for ME/CFS that includes a role for both antibodies and T cells. Those roles are rather different from typical autoimmunity but then each autoimmune disease is a bit different. We focus on a receptor called FcRI. That could well be wrong but it provides a story that seems to make sense.
Jo Cambridge has been involved in the evolution of this for a long time. Jackie Cliff was asked to help on the T cell side and did a great job pulling that aspect together. This isn't specifically her preferred theory, but then I wouldn't say it was for Jo and I either. It is an exercise in seeing how one could make a testable theory that accounted for all the salient facts.
We have deliberately put this out with a reference to DecodeME results being expected soon. The idea is to stimulate debate by seeing to what extent those results fit with or test existing ideas.
Sorry not to actually post the paper here but this is to reassure people that it really is about to appear!
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