Journal
IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 164, Issue 3, Pages 450-466Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/imm.13395
Keywords
autoimmunity; B Cell; neurodegeneration; neuroinflammation; T follicular helper cell
Categories
Funding
- China Scholarship Council [CSC201706010354]
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Ectopic lymphoid follicles (ELFs), similar to germinal center-like structures, are present in various infectious, autoimmune, and neoplastic diseases, and are associated with disease progression and cortical degeneration in progressive multiple sclerosis. However, the lack of a uniform definition of ELFs impedes reproducible and comparable neuropathological research in this field.
Ectopic lymphoid follicles (ELFs), resembling germinal centre-like structures, emerge in a variety of infectious and autoimmune and neoplastic diseases. ELFs can be found in the meninges of around 40% of the investigated progressive multiple sclerosis (MS) post-mortem brain tissues and are associated with the severity of cortical degeneration and clinical disease progression. Of predominant importance for progressive neuronal damage during the progressive MS phase appears to be meningeal inflammation, comprising diffuse meningeal infiltrates, B-cell aggregates and compartmentalized ELFs. However, the absence of a uniform definition of ELFs impedes reproducible and comparable neuropathological research in this field. In this review article, we will first highlight historical aspects and milestones around the discovery of ELFs in the meninges of progressive MS patients. In the next step, we discuss how animal models may contribute to an understanding of the mechanisms underlying ELF formation. Finally, we summarize challenges in investigating ELFs and propose potential directions for future research.
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