Ron Davis: Grant award: Molecular and single-cell immunology in ME/CFS

Indigophoton

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Ron Davis has been awarded several million dollars by the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases to "uncover the immunological basis of ME" by examining T cell activity and related genetic factors, and by hunting for pathogens. The project start date is this month, and the end date is May 2023.
PROJECT SUMMARY Myalgic encephalomyelitis, also known as chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), is a complex, debilitating disease that has baffled researchers for decades. Its inaccurate yet frequent dismissal as a psychosomatic condition and lack of recognition by many in the biomedical community have greatly hindered research; as a result, very little is known about its cause(s), and no biological diagnosis or approved treatments are available. Recent developments have more clearly defined this mysterious illness, and it is now clear that it afflicts up to 2.5 million in the United States and millions more worldwide.

While the symptoms present at various levels, including neurological and cognitive, widespread molecular and immunological abnormalities have also been observed. This is consistent with a majority of patients reporting infection prior to the onset of ME/CFS, although it remains unclear why common infections would serve as triggers for a chronic illness only in some people. Nevertheless, there is compelling evidence for an active immune response in ME/CFS, as suggested by elevated levels of signalling molecules called cytokines and activity of killer T cells, which are triggered in cases of infection or autoimmunity.

This proposal aims to uncover the immunological basis of ME/CFS, by characterizing T cell activity and genetic factors that may be contributing to it using cutting-edge technologies invented by this team.

Firstly, the activity of different T cells will be examined using single-cell DNA sequencing methods that will determine the extent and nature of their activation, and its regulation by gene expression.

Secondly, the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) locus – the most challenging region of the human genome to sequence, and the most relevant to individual differences in immunology – will be sequenced in a large cohort of ME/CFS patients to determine whether HLA variants may be contributing to the T cell activity observed, and/or to increased susceptibility to the disease. Finally, the molecular triggers of the immune response will be hunted using cell-free DNA sequencing to detect pathogens, and through methods to identify which molecules are being targeted by the activated T cells.

Taken together, these findings will help to identify the molecular and immunological factors that trigger and/or sustain ME/CFS as a chronic illness, and whether its basis is infectious, autoimmune, or both. More broadly, this project will build a precise framework for ME/CFS as a molecular and immunological disease, opening up broad new possibilities for research, diagnosis, and treatment.

Understanding the molecular nature of the immune response in ME/CFS may lead to the definition of clinically valuable subtypes, refined diagnostics, risk prediction, and personalized immunomodulatory therapies. Moreover, the similarity of ME/CFS to other medically challenging diseases like Lyme disease, multiple sclerosis, Gulf War Illness, fibromyalgia, and more means that the insights derived here could be relevant to many millions of patients.

https://projectreporter.nih.gov/project_info_description.cfm?aid=9577948&icde=40034644

Edit: typo
Edit2: updated funding amount
 
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This is detail and probably irrelevant... I was reading the Project Terms at the bottom of the NIH Project Information - Description page. The list was validating. Until this...

Psychophysiological disorders

It seems that this is another term for psychosomatic disorders.

Psychophysiological disorders occur when a psychological condition causes or exacerbates physical symptoms.

It's one of those terms that can mean anything at all - from an unobjectionable 'stress makes the illness worse, perhaps because the stress causes lack of sleep or not eating well', through to something like 'conversion disorder'.

I know there are quite a number of seemingly random terms there in the list - 'tuberculosis' and 'play' for example. Perhaps having 'psychophysiological disorders' there says nothing about what the NIH believe now. It's interesting though to see the terms that do get a mention while 'myalgic encephalomyelitis' isn't mentioned.

Does anyone know how those Project Terms are identified?
 
I know there are quite a number of seemingly random terms there - 'tuberculosis' and 'play' for example. Perhaps having 'psychophysiological disorders' there says nothing about what the NIH believe now. It's interesting though to see the terms that do get a mention while 'myalgic encephalomyelitis' isn't mentioned.

Does anyone know how those Project Terms are identified?

The presence of nonsense terms suggests they are automatically generated with an imperfect algorithm.
 
Really great news! And we couldn't have a better team working on this.

Like the first para of the summary too:

"PROJECT SUMMARY Myalgic encephalomyelitis, also known as chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), is a complex, debilitating disease that has baffled researchers for decades. Its inaccurate yet frequent dismissal as a psychosomatic condition and lack of recognition by many in the biomedical community have greatly hindered research; as a result, very little is known about its cause(s), and no biological diagnosis or approved treatments are available. Recent developments have more clearly defined this mysterious illness, and it is now clear that it afflicts up to 2.5 million in the United States and millions more worldwide."

And it would be so good if this research could also help GWS, lyme etc
 
I think this shows that Chris Ponting's replication attempt on the earlier work by Mark Davis is even more timely now - should Ron find anything with this study, then we'll be able to have a higher confidence in it if the replication is successful.

Have we ever had a situation, at least in recent ME history, where a line of investigation is ongoing and replication efforts are taking place concurrently, in the way that we have here?
 
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