I have been re-reading with more sleep and time to compost things. If I’m understanding the explanation…It can get a bit like Chinese wire puzzles but once you see how things fit I think it is intelligible.
Aha, receptor mediated endocytosis? Or am I suffering from ‘thing I just learnt about’ syndrome?It doesn't look relevant to me. We are not interested in any signalling by FcRI here, just endocytosis. The signalling is from ingested peptides presented on MHC and from the T cells.
Aha, receptor mediated endocytosis?
An illness mediated by FcRI would tend to always look the same
Woohoo! Sunday has been a success. Thanks Jonathan and thank you to the greek gods of qeios for the extra time to digest information.That's the one.
This is all sounding very intriguing…I am beginning to think that FcRI is an even more likely candidate than I had already wondered.
I am frantically mugging up on immunology...and am suddenly struck by how forum members here are functioning like dendritic cells bringing interesting bits of stuff to other forum members in the lymph nodes
So hypothetically speaking FcRI mediated illnesses might 'look the same' but, like with the different arthritises, have enough hetrogenity to account for the diversity in symptoms we see in pwME?
Very astute @Sasha! Certainly more astute than my brain’s attempts to do the same thing.I am frantically mugging up on immunology via the fantastic Kurzgesagt book, 'Immune', to be half-ready for the Qeois paper, and am suddenly struck by how forum members here are functioning like dendritic cells bringing interesting bits of stuff to other forum members in the lymph nodes to make sense of and come up with a solution forr. We're like one giant immune system!
(Or maybe at this point, even a blob of melted ice-cream on the floor would look like an immune system to me, given that I am over-immersed...)
Would the corollary, then, be that it tends to look temporally consistent as well? Or would there be room for fluctuation triggered by activityI am beginning to think that FcRI is an even more likely candidate than I had already wondered.
An illness mediated by FcRI would tend to always look the same, just as one mediated by FcRIII looks like an inflammatory arthritis, whether RA, lupus or whatever.
forum members here are functioning like dendritic cells bringing interesting bits of stuff to other forum members in the lymph nodes to make sense of and come up with a solution for
Alternatively, the vast amount of ideas get ignored after being determined inconsequential, but some shining bits raise the alarm so that the problem gets attacked head-on!In a strictly Popperian analysis, that could be true - all these nice ideas in the literature being brought in so that they can be refuted and disgorged!!
What we really want though is to find an idea that we cannot refute. The immune system isn't really interested in that any more than a policeman is interested in the fact that young Jimmy has learnt to ride his bike.
I haven't got to that bit yet but I am already excited that I now know what the first big word means in the paper title (macrophage!).Here's your first test then.What type of cells don't even bother because they know it's so far out of their ability range they'd do better trying to dance en pointe?
Would the corollary, then, be that it tends to look temporally consistent as well? Or would there be room for fluctuation triggered by activity
To get PEM there would need to be another signal that, as Snow Leopard has pointed out, the neuron is sensitised to by having its calcium flux shifted by FcRI interactions. Muscle usage or metabolic shifts or cytokine shifts triggered by activity could all come in.
Ooo I read that myself a couple years ago. It was a fun read. Though I was obliviously unnaware my immune system was about to go weird after I got COVID a couple months later.the fantastic Kurzgesagt book, 'Immune'