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Title: Reversal of acute experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis and prevention of relapses by treatment with a myelin basic protein peptide analogue modified to form long-lived peptide-MHC complexes. Author: Samson MF, Smilek DE. Journal: J Immunol; 1995 Sep 01; 155(5):2737-46. PubMed ID: 7544383. Abstract: Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) is an autoimmune disease induced by immunization with myelin basic protein (MBP), proteolipid protein, or encephalitogenic peptides from these myelin components. EAE resembles basic protein multiple sclerosis in some of its clinical and histologic features, and serves as an experimental model for this and other autoimmune diseases. In this study, we examine i.v. peptide therapy of EAE in detail, and show that repeated i.v. injections of MBP peptides effectively treat EAE in (PLJxSJL)F1 mice. In this study, administration of the immunodominant epitope (MBP Ac1-11) prevents MBP-induced disease, whereas the subdominant epitope MBP 31-47 is neither required nor sufficient. Intravenous administration of substituted MBP peptide analogues is also effective in treating EAE, provided the peptide side chains presumed to be involved in TCR contact and MHC binding are preserved. A substituted MBP peptide analogue that forms long-lived peptide-MHC complexes in vivo is more effective than the unmodified MBP peptide. Lower doses of the substituted peptide analogue are effective, and the effect is longer lasting than treatment with the unmodified peptide. Clinical signs of EAE are reversed by injection of the substituted peptide during the acute phase of disease. Moreover, treatment of mice in the remission phase of EAE results in a dramatically reduced incidence of relapse. In summary, we have shown that EAE can be reversed after onset and treated during remission with an MBP peptide analogue that has been modified for improved therapeutic potency.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]