AbstractsBiology & Animal Science

The Origin of Multiple Sclerosis Revisited: The Case for a Soluble Toxin

by Kareem Rashid Rumah




Institution: Rockefeller University
Department:
Degree: PhD
Year: 2014
Record ID: 2031853
Full text PDF: http://hdl.handle.net/10209/555


Abstract

After nearly two hundred years of scientific inquiry, the cause of Multiple Sclerosis (MS) remains unknown. Although generally considered an autoimmune disease, recent pathological findings have challenged the longstanding autoimmune view of MS. Indeed, lesions that are just hours past their initial onset display evidence of cellular degeneration in the absence of an inflammatory infiltrate. This seminal finding begs the fundamental question, if immune cells do not participate in early tissue damage in MS, what is the mysterious triggering agent? In the first half of this thesis, I will propose that a soluble bacterial toxin, Clostridium perfringens epsilon toxin (ETX), may be the long sought environmental trigger for MS. ETX is a neurotoxin with a unique tropism for the brain tissues that are specifically damaged during acute MS exacerbations, the blood-brain barrier and the myelin sheath. Using a Western blot seroreactivity assay, I have identified a 10-fold increase in anti-ETX seroreactivity when comparing MS patient samples to that of controls. Furthermore, PCR analysis of bacterial cultures from patient stool samples has yielded the discovery of the first human known to harbor C. perfringens type B, an ETX secreting bacterium that is not part of the normal human microbiota. Intriguingly, this individual was found to be in the early stages of developing MS. I have also determined that MS iv patients are 2X less likely to harbor the human commensal C. perfringens type A, which has been shown to outcompete toxin-producing C. perfringens strains, e.g. type B, within a shared ecological niche. Therefore, commensal type A may protect against type B dysbiosis and may protect against developing MS. Although the ETX/MS hypothesis is obscure at best, ETX’s extreme potency has driven interest in identifying its cellular receptor. Indeed, ETX is the third most potent toxin known to man, following only Clostridium botulinum and tetanus toxins in lethality. For this reason, it is considered a legitimate bioterrorism threat. Despite decades of research, the ETX receptor is still yet to be identified. In the second half of this thesis, I will propose that the tetraspan proteolipid, Myelin and Lymphocyte protein (MAL) is a bona fide ETX receptor. Recombinant expression of MAL by an ETX resistant Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) cell line confers both ETX binding and susceptibility. Additionally, probing tissues harvested from MAL knockout (KO) mice with fluorescently labeled ETX demonstrates a complete abolishment of ETX binding. Finally, MAL KO mice display a remarkable level of ETX resistance even when exposed to 1000X of our experimentally determined LD50 for wild type animals. Taken together, these data suggest that MAL is both necessary and sufficient for ETX binding and toxicity. In summary, I have generated data suggesting that an increased exposure to C. perfringens epsilon toxin may exist in the MS population when compared to controls. This may be important, as ETX specifically targets the blood-brain barrier and the myelin…