The results of this study are strange, and my first instinct was to blame the results on false positives on the Cell Trend test for CFSAABhigh, but then we find:
The costimulatory effect we observed in mice splenocytes was opposite to the inhibitory effect on human monocytes and may be either related to the fact that the ß2R in mice is not fully homologous or that the spleen contains mostly differentiated macrophages.
Suggesting they are reactive, but in a different way. It is not explained in this study why some IgG become agonists and others antagonists.
Also, β-arrestin recruitment inhibits the functioning of the GPCR and targets receptors for internalization. β-arrestin activity is basically a cellular response to aberrant kinetics of receptor activation.
We and others observed capillary endothelial dysfunction in ME/CFS patients ((
Newton et al., 2007) and own manuscript submitted). There is evidence from experimental studies indicating a role of β2 AdR autoantibodies in the development of endothelial dysfunction (
Liu et al., 2013). We found a normalization of endothelial function in patients with elevated levels of β2 AdR antibodies who underwent immunoadsorption to remove β2 AdR antibodies (own manuscript submitted).
Interesting.
Norepinephrine and epinephrine levels were higher in ME/CFS than controls in two studies (
Kavelaars et al., 2000;
Wyller et al., 2016).
This is not true, Kavelaars et al stated "Plasma noradrenaline levels in CFS patients did not differ from levels in healthy subjects (CFS, 1.47 ± 0.1 nmol/L, n = 14; control, 1.46 ± 0.2 nmol/L, n = 14;
P = 0.98)."
Wyller have several studies that find elevated basal catecholamines, however the participants of their studies were adolescents and there can be social factors (e.g. anxiety about the blood draw) leading to artefactual results.
Suspiciously they didn't mention the other studies found that found normal catecholamines levels at rest.
They also did not mention the several studies by Light and colleagues that found increased β2 Adrenergic receptor expression in leukocytes post-exercise challenge, despite normal or slightly low receptor expression before the exercise challenge.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/22210239/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2757484/