作者
Marc Charabati,Camille Grasmuck,Soufiane Ghannam,Lyne Bourbonnière,Antoine Fournier,Marc‐André Lécuyer,Olivier Tastet,Hania Kébir,Rose‐Marie Rébillard,Chloé Hoornaert,Elizabeth Gowing,Sandra Larouche,Olivier Fortin,Camille Pittet,Ali Filali‐Mouhim,Boaz Lahav,Robert Moumdjian,Alain Bouthillier,Marc Girard,Pierre Duquette,Romain Cayrol,Evelyn Peelen,Francisco J. Quintana,Jack P. Antel,Alexander Flügel,Catherine Larochelle,Nathalie Arbour,Stéphanie Zandee,Alexandre Prat
摘要
The migration of circulating leukocytes into the central nervous system (CNS) is a key driver of multiple sclerosis (MS) pathogenesis. The monoclonal antibody natalizumab proved that pharmaceutically obstructing this process is an effective therapeutic approach for treating relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS). Unfortunately, the clinical efficacy of natalizumab is somewhat offset by its incapacity to control the progressive forms of MS (PMS) and by life-threatening side effects in RRMS rising from the expression of its molecular target, very late antigen 4 (VLA4), on most immune cells and consequent impairment of CNS immunosurveillance. Here, we identified dual immunoglobulin domain containing cell adhesion molecule (DICAM) as a cell trafficking molecule preferentially expressed by T helper 17 (TH17)–polarized CD4+ T lymphocytes. We found that DICAM expression on circulating CD4+ T cells was increased in patients with active RRMS and PMS disease courses, and expression of DICAM ligands was increased on the blood-brain barrier endothelium upon inflammation and in MS lesions. Last, we demonstrated that pharmaceutically neutralizing DICAM reduced murine and human TH17 cell trafficking across the blood-brain barrier in vitro and in vivo, and alleviated disease symptoms in four distinct murine autoimmune encephalomyelitis models, including relapsing-remitting and progressive disease models. Collectively, our data highlight DICAM as a candidate therapeutic target to impede the migration of disease-inducing leukocytes into the CNS in both RRMS and PMS and suggest that blocking DICAM with a monoclonal antibody may be a promising therapeutic approach.