EAE is the primary pre-clinical disease for modelling the autoimmune/inflammatory component of multiple sclerosis. In fact, EAE is the primordial CD4+ T-cell-driven autoimmune disease model. It is striking (although perhaps unsurprising) that more than 10 000 publications over seven decades have provided a confusing, rather than a satisfying, picture of etiopathology. In the current issue of the European Journal of Immunology, an analysis of mice lacking LFA-1 is reported. Given the role of this integrin in T-cell activation and effector cell migration, one might predict resistance of LFA-1-/- mice to EAE induction. Instead, this study unexpectedly reports that EAE was exacerbated in the absence of LFA-1, and that this correlated with a decrease in the steady-state numbers of Foxp3+ Treg in the LFA-1-/- mice. Previous studies on the role of LFA-1 in EAE have been reviewed recently. This Commentary focuses on our current understanding of Treg function in the development and resolution of EAE and discusses how the absence of LFA-1 might unhinge these, possibly by altering the generation of Treg in the thymus, their expansion in response to autoantigen immunization, or their infiltration of the CNS. © 2010 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
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Anderton, S. M. (2010). Treg and T-effector cells in autoimmune CNS inflammation: A delicate balance, easily disturbed. European Journal of Immunology, 40(12), 3321–3324. https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.201041100