Enhanced astrocyte responses are driven by a genetic risk allele associated with multiple sclerosis

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Abstract

Epigenetic annotation studies of genetic risk variants for multiple sclerosis (MS) implicate dysfunctional lymphocytes in MS susceptibility; however, the role of central nervous system (CNS) cells remains unclear. We investigated the effect of the risk variant, rs7665090 G , located near NFKB1, on astrocytes. We demonstrated that chromatin is accessible at the risk locus, a prerequisite for its impact on astroglial function. The risk variant was associated with increased NF-κB signaling and target gene expression, driving lymphocyte recruitment, in cultured human astrocytes and astrocytes within MS lesions, and with increased lesional lymphocytic infiltrates and lesion sizes. Thus, our study establishes a link between genetic risk for MS (rs7665090 G ) and dysfunctional astrocyte responses associated with increased CNS access for peripheral immune cells. MS may therefore result from variant-driven dysregulation of the peripheral immune system and of the CNS, where perturbed CNS cell function aids in establishing local autoimmune inflammation.

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Ponath, G., Lincoln, M. R., Levine-Ritterman, M., Park, C., Dahlawi, S., Mubarak, M., … Pitt, D. (2018). Enhanced astrocyte responses are driven by a genetic risk allele associated with multiple sclerosis. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-07785-8

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