Publications by authors named "Kokona Chatzantoni"

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an inflammatory, demyelinating disease of the central nervous system, and it has been established that autoreactive T helper (Th) cells play a crucial role in its pathogenesis. Myelin basic protein (MBP) epitopes are major autoantigens in MS, and the sequence MBP87-99 is an immunodominant epitope. We have previously reported that MBP87-99 peptides with modifications at principal T-cell receptor (TCR) contact sites suppressed the induction of EAE symptoms in rats and SJL/J mice, diverted the immune response from Th1 to Th2 and generated antibodies that did not cross react with the native MBP protein.

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Derangement of cellular immunity is central in the pathophysiology of multiple sclerosis (MS) and is often manifested by abnormal cytokine production. We investigated cytokine secretion in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of 18 MS patients and 15 controls and correlated cytokine polarization with the nature of antigenic stimulus. We synthesized two novel citrullinated peptides, linear [Cit(91), Ala(96), Cit(97)]MBP(87-99) and cyclo(87-99)[Cit(91), Ala(96), Cit(97)]MBP(87-99) that resulted from citrullination of 91,97 Arg residues in antagonists, linear [Arg(91), Ala(96)]MBP(87-99) and cyclo(87-99)[Arg(91), Ala(96)]MBP(87-99) peptides.

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Background: The complexity of autoimmune diseases is reflected on their clinicopathological heterogeneity and the failure to find treatments that cure them after over a century of research. Conventional treatments help ameliorate disease activity but they treat the symptoms whereas the diseases remain incurable in the vast majority of patients.

Objective: To confront diseases of such nature it is essential to discover therapeutics that will lead to the induction of tolerance or the specific deletion of autoreactive lymphocytes.

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Autoimmune diseases affect about 3% of the world population, more frequently women than men, and their incidence is attributed to an immune response of a genetically predisposed individual to an environmental pathogen, under the influence of inadequate immuno-regulatory mechanisms. Advances in understanding the cellular activity pathways and cytokine expression profiles have led to new therapeutic regiments, like soluble receptors, monoclonal antibodies and molecular mimetics that have been employed to enhance or replace conventional immunosuppressive therapies. Among new biologicals that have been developed to target defined pathways of the adaptive immune response are TNF-alpha inhibitors.

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Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is a chronic inflammatory degenerative disease of the central nervous system (CNS), first described over 100 years ago. MS is a clinically heterogeneous disease with an increasing incidence over time, and a population prevalence that increases with distance from the equator. It is postulated that environmental factors such as diet and population-specific genetics, influence the distribution of MS.

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Autoimmune diseases are many, have an overall prevalence of about 3% of the world population, affecting more women than men, and their incidence is influenced by genetics and the environment. It is currently thought that the immune response of a genetically predisposed individual to an environmental pathogen, under the influence of inadequate or non-functional immunoregulatory mechanisms, can lead to the development of an autoimmune disease. Advances in the treatment of autoimmune diseases follow a better understanding of the abnormalities in the cellular activity pathways and the resulting, often permanent, imbalance of the pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokine expression profiles.

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A cyclic analogue, [cyclo(87-99)MBP(87)(-)(99)], of the human immunodominant MBP(87)(-)(99) epitope, was designed based on ROESY/NMR distance information and modeling data for linear epitope 87-99, taking into account T-cell (Phe(89), Lys(91), Pro(96)) and HLA (His(88), Phe(90), Ile(93)) contact side-chain information. The cyclic analogue was found to induce experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE), to bind HLA-DR4, and to increase CD4 T-cell line proliferation, like that of the conformationally related linear MBP(87)(-)(99) epitope peptide. The mutant cyclic peptides, the cyclo(91-99)[Ala(96)]MBP(87)(-)(99) and the cyclo(87-99)[Arg(91)Ala(96)]MBP(87)(-)(99), reported previously for suppressing, to a varying degree, autoimmune encephalomyelitis in a rat animal model, were found in this study to possess the following immunomodulatory properties: (i) they suppressed the proliferation of a CD4 T-cell line raised from a multiple sclerosis patient, (ii) they scored the best in vitro TH2/TH1 cytokine ratio in peripheral blood mononuclear cell cultures derived from 13 multiple sclerosis patients, inducing IL-10 selectively, and (iii) they bound to HLA-DR4, first to be reported for cyclic MBP peptides.

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Leptin is synthesized by adipocytes to regulate appetite. Leptin has also been implicated in the pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis (MS) leading to speculation about a beneficial effect of fasting to autoimmune patients. We measured plasma leptin and its soluble receptor (OB-Rs) in 52 MS patients and 50 controls.

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