Mij
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Establishing whether this two-step process occurs will require acquisition of serial serum samples from a large group of pre-symptomatic individuals. The Department of Defense Serum Repository, which was used to identify EBV as a risk factor, could also potentially be used to understand and confirm the role of HHV-6A. Using this repository, an auto-antibody motif common in human peptides that is also present in viral pathogens was recently identified from samples obtained during the multiple sclerosis prodrome and was also detected in a cohort of participants with relapsing multiple sclerosis within 90 days of symptom onset.10 That two EBV proteins—BRRF2 and envelope glycoprotein M—share homology with this motif suggests that reactivity against these viral epitopes could trigger autoreactivity against human peptides with similar sequences.
Identification of CSF antibodies that recognize HHV-6A peptides and cross react with human CNS peptides would add credence to a potential role for HHV-6A in molecular mimicry. PCR studies are needed to determine whether HHV-6A DNA can be detected in the saliva, peripheral blood mononuclear cells or CSF of newly diagnosed patients relative to well matched unaffected controls to provide evidence for a role of active HHV-6A infection in multiple sclerosis. At present, vaccinations against EBV and HHV-6A are not commercially available. However, should such vaccines become available, individuals who are at high risk for developing multiple sclerosis could become early beneficiaries of a primary prevention strategy.
https://academic.oup.com/brain/article/147/1/7/7477816
Identification of CSF antibodies that recognize HHV-6A peptides and cross react with human CNS peptides would add credence to a potential role for HHV-6A in molecular mimicry. PCR studies are needed to determine whether HHV-6A DNA can be detected in the saliva, peripheral blood mononuclear cells or CSF of newly diagnosed patients relative to well matched unaffected controls to provide evidence for a role of active HHV-6A infection in multiple sclerosis. At present, vaccinations against EBV and HHV-6A are not commercially available. However, should such vaccines become available, individuals who are at high risk for developing multiple sclerosis could become early beneficiaries of a primary prevention strategy.
https://academic.oup.com/brain/article/147/1/7/7477816