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Systemic administration of anti-CD20 indirectly reduces B cells in the inflamed meninges in a chronic model of central nervous system autoimmunity

Yodit Tesfagiorgis, Eden A. Kemal, Heather C. Craig, Kate A. Parham, Steven M. Kerfoot

Journal of neuroimmunology(2024)

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Abstract
Anti-CD20 B cell depleting therapies have demonstrated that B cells are important drivers of disease progress in Multiple Sclerosis, although the pathogenic mechanisms are not well understood. A population of B cells accumulates in the inflamed meninges in MS and also some chronic animal models of disease, typically adjacent to demyelinating lesions. The role of these meningeal B cells in disease is not known, nor is their susceptibility to anti-CD20 therapy. Here, we administered anti-CD20 to 2D2 IgHMOG spontaneous experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis mice in the chronic phase of disease, after the establishment of meningeal B cell clusters. Compared to the circulation, lymph nodes, and spleen, B cell depletion from the meninges was delayed and not evident until 7d post-administration of anti-CD20. Further, we did not find evidence that anti-CD20 accessed meningeal B cells directly, but rather that depletion was indirect and the result of ongoing turnover of the meningeal population and elimination of the peripheral pool from which it is sustained.
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Key words
B cell,T cell,Autoimmunity,EAE,MOG,Multiple sclerosis,Anti-CD20
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