Breakthrough MS Study Maps Brain Cells, Paves Way for Personalized Treatments

December 20, 2024
Breakthrough MS Study Maps Brain Cells, Paves Way for Personalized Treatments
  • An international research team, including experts from Karolinska Institutet, has published a groundbreaking study in the journal Neuron, creating a gene expression atlas of brain cells in multiple sclerosis (MS).

  • This comprehensive study examined over half a million brain cells from deceased MS patients, allowing researchers to analyze individual cell resolution.

  • The researchers identified four distinct groups of brain cells based on their gene expression profiles, which suggest varying responses to treatments.

  • These findings pave the way for more personalized MS treatments by enabling the identification of specific patient subgroups based on their unique brain cell profiles.

  • Professor Anna Williams from the University of Edinburgh emphasized the goal of developing blood tests that can categorize MS patients, facilitating tailored clinical trials.

  • While current MS treatments primarily target immune cells in the blood and are effective in the early stages of the disease, there is a pressing need for therapies that act directly on brain cells, especially for progressive cases.

  • MS is a chronic inflammatory disease that predominantly affects individuals in their 30s and 40s, leading to a wide range of symptoms and varying levels of disability.

  • Despite advancements, there remains a limited understanding of how brain cell impacts MS, highlighting the variability in patient experiences with the disease.

  • Professor Gonçalo Castelo-Branco from Karolinska Institutet stressed the importance of personalized treatment approaches based on the genetic signatures identified in this research.

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