B-cell abundance in perivascular cuffs associates with local lesion activity in multiple sclerosis
Hendrik J. Engelenburg, Esmée Westenbrink, Eline Runderkamp, Ana M. Marques, Marvin M. van Luijn, Cheng-Chih Hsiao, Inge Huitinga, Jörg Hamann, Joost Smolders

TL;DR
B cells in perivascular cuffs are linked to active lesions in multiple sclerosis brains, suggesting a role in disease progression.
Contribution
Identifies B-cell enrichment in perivascular cuffs as a marker of lesion activity in progressive MS.
Findings
Perivascular cuffs with higher B-cell abundance are associated with active or mixed MS lesions.
CD4+ T cells correlate with antibody-secreting cells in perivascular cuffs.
BTK is abundantly expressed in B cells and macrophages within cuffs, suggesting therapeutic targeting potential.
Abstract
Perivascular aggregations of leukocytes, referred to as perivascular cuffs, are a pathological phenomenon in progressive multiple sclerosis (MS). Perivascular cuffing is an exaggerated form of compartmentalized inflammation present in progressive disease. By studying traits of perivascular cuffs, this study aims to elucidate processes within the perivascular niche of the MS brain. We characterized n = 255 MS donors from the Netherlands Brain Bank for the presence of perivascular cuffs and investigated their association with clinical and pathological donor characteristics. Furthermore, we examined the proportional abundance of different cell types and functional markers in n = 457 perivascular cuffs present in different lesion stages within a cohort of n = 18 MS brain donors. MS donors with detected perivascular cuffs (25.5%) showed a higher brainstem lesion count. Within these cuffs,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMultiple Sclerosis Research Studies · CNS Lymphoma Diagnosis and Treatment · Cerebrospinal fluid and hydrocephalus
