Transcript Slide 1
Multiple Sclerosis: Epidemiology, Genetics and Environmental Factors Outcomes from the MS Forum Modern Management Workshop, February 2007, Wiesbaden, Germany Introduction • MS is an autoimmune demyelinating disorder of the central nervous system • Both environmental and genetic factors contribute to the aetiology of MS • No single factor is responsible for conferring susceptibility – MS is a multifactorial disease Multiple Sclerosis: Epidemiology, Genetics and Environmental Factors Epidemiology • First study of geographical distribution of MS prevalence by Davenport • Key finding: Geographical variation in MS prevalence, implying population (genetic) and environmental contributions to MS risk This article was published in McAlpine’s Multiple Sclerosis 4th edition. Compston A. ed. London Churchill Livingstone Elsevier 2006;55 Fig 1.33 Copyright Elsevier (2007) The Geographical Distribution of MS Davenport CB. In: Association for Research in Nervous and Medical Conditions (ARNMD), vol 2. New York: Hoeber, 1921;pp8–19. • Study in France confirms that MS prevalence shows a gradient roughly increasing from the equator even in homogenous populations 93 103 82 77 97 100 88 87 62 59 84 70 95 47 76 78 71 55 51 53 51 53 Vukusic S et al. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiat 2007;78:707–709. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiat 2007;78:707–9. Reproduced/amended with permission from the BMJ Publishing Groups The Geographical Distribution of MS – Prevalence Increases away from the Equator The Effect of Migration on MS Prevalence 140 Prevalence for 100,000 • Non-migrants: prevalence low (~20/100 000) • Migrants: prevalence increased (~40/100 000) • Migrants <15 years old: prevalence highest (~140/100 000) 160 Migrants to a temperate region before the age of 15 years Migrants to a temperate region Migrants to a temperate region after the age of 15 years Non-Migrants 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 15–24 25–34 35–44 Age Cabre P et al. Brain 2005;128:2899–2910. 45–54 55–64 Cabre P, Prevalence of MS in the French West Indies in the West Indian population aged from 15 to 64 years on 12/31/1999 according to migration to temperate region, Brain, 2005, 128, 2899–2910, by permission of Oxford University Press Immigration studies: West Indians returning to French West Indies from France French West Indies – MS prevalence (31/12/1999) Epidemics or Clusters of MS • 55 cases since 1940 – Four incidence peaks • Occupied during World War II • Authors concluded that this was evidence of an MS epidemic caused by an agent introduced by the troops • Evidence of epidemics has not been replicated 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 1940 1945 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 Kurtzke JF et al. Acta Neurol Scand 1993;88:161–173. Kurtske JF, Multiple sclerosis in the Faroe Islands. 5, Acta Neurol Scand 1993;88:161–73, Blackwell Publishing Ltd The annual incidence of MS (per 100 000 inhabitants) in the Faroe Islands since 1940 • No documented cases of MS on the Faroe Islands until after World War II The Geography of MS: Interpretation Interpretation of geographical and migration data – three possible factors: • Infections – Direct: Many historical candidates but none confirmed – Indirect: Hygiene Hypothesis, e.g. parasitic commensalism1 • Chemico-physical environment – Sunlight – Vitamin D3 – Diet • Population genetics – MS prevalence varies with ethnic ancestry: Caucasian 1, black 0.5, oriental, 0.1 1 Correale J et al. Ann Neurol 2007;61:97–108. The Geography of MS: Conclusions • The aetiology of MS is complex • There is evidence for both infection and the chemico-physical environment playing roles • Additional data are needed to conclusively prove which factors are important in MS risk Multiple Sclerosis: Epidemiology, Genetics and Environmental Factors Genetics The Genetics of MS: Twin Studies • High MZ versus DZ concordance rates reflect genetic factors • Concordance rates vary with background prevalence: – Canada, Denmark, Finland, UK, USA1 MZ = 25–30% DZ = 3–5% – France1 MZ = 5.9% DZ = 3% – Italy2 MZ = 14.5% DZ = 4% 1Willer CJ et al. PNAS 2003;100:12877–12882; 2Ristori G et al. Ann Neurol 2006;59:27–34. The Genetics of MS: Twin Studies • Study of MS concordance among twins by sex, zygosity and latitude (USA and Canada):1 – MZ concordance rate 1.9 times greater among northern twins where female concordance is greater – Variation in MZ concordance rate by latitude is influenced by environmental and genetic factors • Under-representation of MS among different twin populations: – MZ and DZ twins in Italy – DZ twins in Sardinia – DZ twins in Denmark • Early protective factors shared by twins may reduce susceptibility to MS 1Islam T et al. Ann Neurol 2006;60:56–64. The Genetics of MS: Twin Studies Longitudinal, population-based study of twins with MS in Canada • 75% of Canadian MS twin pairs ascertained • Twinning had no effect on prevalence • Twins with MS did not differ for MS risk to their siblings • MZ twin concordance >DZ. Excess primarily from like-sexed female pairs • No MZ/DZ difference in males • Non-significant 2-fold increase in risk to DZ twins over non-twin siblings of twins Willer CJ et al. PNAS 2003;100:12877–12882. The Genetics of MS: Half-Sibling Results • Half-sibling rate of MS in those raised together versus apart is identical – environment effect undetectable. Micro-environment effect not seen • ‘Parent-of-origin’ effect, demonstrated by maternal versus paternal half-sibling MS rate – mother more likely to be common parent • Full sibling rate 3.5% (share 50% of genome), expect lower (around half) MS rate in half-siblings (share only 25% of genome) • Results suggest familial risk not polygenic in nature and/or polygenes have little influence on the inheritance pattern Ebers GC et al. Lancet 2004;363:1773–1774. The Genetics of MS: The Rate of MS in Females is Increasing • No plausible confounders identified 30 Mean Sex Ratio • Effect independent of diagnostic changes 32 28 26 24 22 Mean Sex Ratio Lower 95% Cl Upper 95% Cl 20 18 1Orton SM et al. Lancet Neurol 2006;5:932–936. Year of Birth This article was published in Lancet Neurol 2006;5, Orton, Sex raion of multiple sclerosis in Canada: a longitundinal study, 93236, Copyright Elsevier (2007) Reprinted with permission from Elsevier (The (Lancet Neurology, 2006, 5, 932–36) • Female-to-male ratio increasing with time Canadian Collaborative Project on Genetic Susceptibility to Multiple Sclerosis1 R=0.84 The Genetics of MS: Cumulative Effect of Adding a Shared Environment Baseline population rate ~1/1000 No additional risk of the shared environment of: • Conjugal cohabitation1 • Being raised together2 (adoptees,3 half-siblings, step-sibling4) • Being born close together5 1Ebers GC et al. Ann Neurol 2000;48:927–931; 2Ebers GC et al. Lancet 2004;363:1773–1774; 3Ebers GC et al. Nature 1995;377:150–151; 4Dyment DA et al. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2006;77:258–259; 5Sadovnick AD et al. Lancet Neurol 2005;4:611–617. The Genetics of MS: Cumulative Effect of Adding a Shared Environment – Conclusion • No effect of shared familial or cohabitational microenvironment detected except – DZ twin MS risk greater than full sibling risk but should not be so, as both share 50% of their genome • Macroenvironmental factors exert effects at a broad population level to influence the geographical distribution of MS The Genetics of MS: Cumulative Effect of Adding Shared Genes • Baseline population rate of 1/1000 – add in the risk of increasing gene sharing: – – – – – – – – Cousin has MS Paternal half-sibling Maternal half-sibling Full sibling HLA-identical sibling Sibling in a consanguineous mating Offspring of a conjugal pair MZ twin (~all genes in common) 7/1000 13/1000 24/1000 35/1000 80/1000 90/1000 200/1000 270/1000 • In contrast to the environment, serial increases in the proportion of genes shared raises the risk of MS at each level Ebers GC. Unpublished data. The Genetics of MS: Which Genes are Important? • If many genes exert small effects, MS risk should decrease in half-siblings versus full siblings – but does not – Suggests a few genes exert a large effect – polygenes have little or no effect on inheritance pattern • Regions of interest in MS identified on all chromosomes, but only one confirmed1 • Positive results for HLA Class I/II, T-cell receptor , IL7-R2 and cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 43 1Colhoun HM et al. Lancet 2003;361:865–872; 2Gregory SG, et al. Nat Genet 2007: published online: 29 July 2007. doi:10.1038/ng2103; 3Dyment DA et al. Lancet Neurol 2004;3:104–110. The Epidemiology and Genetics of MS: Conclusions 1 • Environmental component of MS susceptibility is very large: – Acts early at the population level in susceptible individuals – Possibly encompasses more than one effect (e.g. latitude/sun-related +/- via vitamin D3) • Increased familial risk proportional to degree of relatedness • Common microenvironmental exposure does not explain the familial risk The Epidemiology and Genetics of MS: Conclusions 2 • The findings don’t support predictions from polygenic models • HLA Class II probably contains the major/only locus for susceptibility. Higher order interactions are key Multiple Sclerosis: Epidemiology, Genetics and Environmental Factors Sunshine and Vitamin D3 Potential Effects of Sunshine Exposure Potential effects of sunshine exposure on the human body include: • Circadian rhythm1 • Nervous system2 • Immune system2,3 • Vitamin D3 synthesis2 1Hastings M. BMJ 1998;317:1704–1707; 2Wurtman R. Sci Amer 1975;223:69–77; 3Schwarz T. Keio J Med 2005;54:165–171. Biological Effects of Sunshine: Circadian Rhythm • Several systems that convey light information to the body could be responsible for modulating MS – E.g. the human circadian rhythm regulated by light • Circadian rhythms facilitate physiological fine-tuning to variable activity and rest • Human 24-h clock co-ordinated by a master time switch in suprachiasmatic nuclei, by eyes detecting the light–dark cycles • Immune reactivity differs during the cycle Circadian Rhythm: Evidence for Novel Ocular Photoreceptor • Circadian system cannot be set by light in the absence of eyes • Circadian and visual systems process light differently: – Circadian system processes the entire visual field (irradiance) – Visual system captures light from a specific region • Visually blind mice (no rods/cones) use light to regulate circadian rhythms and melatonin production1,2 • These findings indicated that a third ocular photoreceptor cell existed – the retinal ganglion cells3 1Freedman 507; MS et al. Science 1999;284:502–504; 2Lucas RJ et al. Science 1999;284:505– S et al. Current Biology 2003;13:1290–1298. 3Sekaran • Retinal ganglion cells photoreception play dominant roles in: 5 – Pupil constriction1 – Temperature – Alertness and mood2 – Sleep induction • Seasonal affective disorder shows the same latitude association as MS 10 More alert – Heart rate Alertness 15 20 25 10 1Lucas RJ et al. Nat Neurosci 2001;4:621–626; 2Cajochen C et al. Behav Brain Res 2000;115:75–83. 100 1000 10,000 Illuminance (lux) This article was published in Behav Brain Res, 115, Cajochen C, Dose-response relationship for light intensity and ocular and electroencephalographic correlates of human alertness, 75–83, Copyright Elsevier (2007) Role of Retinal Ganglion Cells Biological Effects of Ultraviolet Radiation on Vitamin D3 7-dehydrocholesterol • Vitamin D3 • Generated in animal skin when light energy is absorbed by a precursor molecule (7-dehydrocholesterol) In skin HO cholecalciferol (vitamin D3) • Inactive until converted to the hormonallyactive form (1,25(OH)2D3) • Many effects on the immune system including: In liver HO 25-hydroxycholecalciferol (25-hydroxy vitamin D3) – Receptors for 1,25(OH)2 vitamin D3 found on immune cells – Inhibits interleukin-2 production – Reduces symptoms in murine EAE – Broad spectrum whole body irradiation reduces murine EAE development OH In kidney HO 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol (1,25-dihydroxy vitamin D3) OH ACTIVE FORM HO OH • Depletes Langerhans cells [1] • Stimulates keratinocytes to release immunosuppressive mediators (IL-10 and TNF) leading to systemic immunosuppression [2] • Converts trans-urocanic acid (UCA) to cis-UCA (immunosuppressive) [3] • Suppresses expression of MHC Class II and costimulatory molecules [4] (e.g. B7) Schwarz T. Keio J Med 2005;54:165–171. Depletion of Langerhans cells (LCs) 1 UVB 2 3 trans-UCA 4 dendritic cell cis-UCA keratinocyte B7 MHC Ag CD 28 IL-10 TNF- T-cell 'tolerance' TCR CD 4 T-lymphocyte Reproduced with permission from Schwarz T. Keio J Med 2005;54:165–171 Biological Effects of Ultraviolet Radiation on the Immune System Biological Effects of Vitamin D3 on the Immune System – Immune Modulation Vitamin D3 is a potent immune modulator: • Enhances dendritic cell apoptosis and macrophage phagocytosis • Enhances activity of natural killer cells • Induces expression of the tolerigenic cytokine IL-10 and the Toll-like receptor co-receptor CD14 • Induces expression of antimicrobial peptides Biological Effects of Vitamin D3 on the Immune System – Immune Modulation • Inhibits DC maturation • Inhibits the function of IL-1 (pro-inflammatory) • Inhibits production of Th1-inducing cytokines • Inhibits transcription of IFNγ target genes and the gene encoding neutrophil chemotactic factor IL-8 • Exhibits anti-tumour activity Activation of Tolllike receptors (TLRs) stimulates innate immune response • Up-regulates expression of vitamin D3 receptor, vitamin D-1hydroxylase genes and production of antimicrobial peptides, e.g. cathelicidin Liu PT et al. Science 2006;311:1770–1773. Reproduced with permission from Bruce Hollis Vitamin D3 Induces Antimicrobial Peptides Vitamin D3 and the CNS: Biological Effects Diverse effects on the vertebrate nervous system – protects against premature cell loss • Induces nerve growth factor expression • Protects against oxidative damage • In rats: – Retards age-related decreases in hippocampal neuronal density – Inhibits expression of markers (L-type voltage-gated calcium channels) – Protects against neuronal cell death in stroke model The Main Biological Effects of Vitamin D3: Summary • Calcium homeostasis – Regulates calcium and phosphorous levels by promoting their absorption from food – Promotes re-absorption of calcium in the kidneys – Promotes bone formation and mineralisation • Cancer chemoprevention – Vitamin D3 supplementation correlated with reduced risk of some cancers • Neuroprotection – Induces expression of nerve growth factor – Protects against reactive oxygen species-induced oxidative damage • Immune system regulation – Promotes immunosuppression, phagocytosis by macrophages, anti-tumour activity Role of Vitamin D3 in Evolution: Early History • Earliest phytoplankton/diatoms produced ergosterol – Converted to previtamin D2 – Acted as a sunscreen – Allowed calcium sequestration • Ingestion of previtamin-D2-rich phytoplankton – Facilitated incorporation of environment calcium into exoskeletons, then endoskeletons in fish • Previtamin D3 synthesis in vertebrate skin – a key innovation facilitating dry land colonisation Role of Vitamin D3 in Evolution: Skin Pigmentation • Humans originated in Africa, where UVB levels were high • Dark skin was the original ancestral condition for the genus Homo Courtesy of Mauricio Antón • Skin with more melanin protects from UV radiation harm • Most organisms exposed to sunlight have melanin in their tegument Reconstruction of Homo ergaster by Mauricio Antón Role of Vitamin D3 in Evolution: Melanin • Absorbs/scatters UV radiation • Neutralises reactive oxygen species (damage DNA) Skin • Occurs widely in nature and slows vitamin D3 production in skin – Problematic for the darkskinned living outside tropical latitudes as UVB levels fall with increasing latitude Melanosome COOH HO O2 NH2 Tyrosine HO HO COOH NH2 DOPA Tyrosinase O2 EUMELANIN O PHEOMELANIN O COOH NH2 DOPAquinone Courtesy of Jennifer Kane Melanocyte Sunshine Implicated in Several Diseases Reduced sunlight exposure has been linked to rickets and possibly to: • Autoimmune diseases: – MS – Rheumatoid arthritis – Type 1 diabetes • Cancer (other than skin cancers) • Seasonal Affective Disorder Holick MF. Am J Clin Nutr 2004;80:1678S–1688S. • Result of vitamin D3 deficiency • Was common in northern countries in light-skinned people • Increasing in equatorial countries in dark-skinned people due to reduced UVB exposure: – Spending more time indoors – Wearing more protective clothing • Reduces pelvic diameter making natural childbirth impossible • Drove natural selection of lighter skin with migration from the equator Photo courtesy of and with permission from Tom D Thacher, MD Role of Vitamin D3 in Evolution: Vitamin D3 Deficiency – Rickets Age-standardised MS prevalence (per 100,000) • • • • MS prevalence greater with increasing latitude in Australia1,2 MS prevalence decreased with increasing light exposure Ultraviolet B light/sunlight correlates with latitude In Tasmania, higher sun exposure (6–15 years) associated with decreased MS risk. Higher exposure probably more important in winter than summer Latitude 80 80 Sunlight 80 70 70 70 60 60 60 50 50 50 40 40 40 30 30 30 20 20 20 10 10 10 0 0 0 0 15 20 25 30 35 40 Latitude (degrees) 1van 45 UVB 0 5.5 6.0 6.5 7.0 7.5 8.0 8.5 9.0 Average annual bright sunshine (h) 0 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 5.0 5.5 Reproduced with permission from van der Mei IA et al. Neuroepidemiology 2001;20:168–174. van der Mei IA et al. BMJ 2003;327:316–321 and S Karger AG, Basel Biological Effects of Sunshine on the Nervous System: Light Exposure and MS Average annual ultraviolet radiation (kJ/m2/day) der Mei IA et al. Neuroepidemiology 2001;20:168–174; 2van der Mei IA et al. BMJ 2003;327:316–321. Role of Vitamin D3: UVB and MS Prevalence • Skin colour darkens in relation to increasing UVR exposure in autumn1 93 • Minimum autumn UVR exposure may be important, rather than maximum summer exposure2 • Higher MS prevalence correlates with lower UV levels in France (map) and the USA • Unclear if skin colour per se affects MS risk 1Jablonski 103 82 77 100 88 98 87 62 59 Department UVMed MIN 3–4 4–6 6–7 7–9 84 47 76 70 78 95 71 55 51 53 51 Courtesy of George Chaplin and George Ebers (unpublished data) MS Prevalence by Department Against UVMED Minimum 10–11 11–13 14–16 NG, Chaplin G. J Hum Evol 2000;39:57–106; 2Chaplin G. Am J Phys Anthropol 2004; 125:292–302. 45 Observed/expected no. of births Possible role of light exposure in MS supported by impact • Of birth month on MS prevalence1 • In the northern hemisphere, significantly more (9.1%) people with MS born in May (less light during pregnancy) than November (8.5% – more light during pregnancy). Birth month effect is inverse in the southern hemisphere 1.15 1.10 Pooled analysis of observed/expected births in people with multiple sclerosis in Canadian, British, Danish and Swedish studies (n=42 045) with 95% confidence intervals 1.05 1.00 0.95 0.90 0.85 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec 1Willer Month CJ et al. BMJ 2005;330:120–125. BMJ 2005;330:120–125 reproduced/amended with permission from the BMJ Publishing Groups Biological Effects of Sunshine on the Nervous System: Birth Month and MS Ultraviolet Radiation and MS: Summary • MS prevalence in Australia closely predicted by regional UVR levels1 • Higher sun exposure (6–15 years) associated with decreased risk of MS2 • Similar findings in France linking increased prevalence of MS with low UVB exposure • In northern Europe and Canada, May birth increases MS risk, suggesting low UV radiation levels during pregnancy may be involved3 1van der Mei IA et al. Neuroepidemiology 2001;20:168–174; 2 van der Mei IA et al. BMJ 2003;327:316– 321; 3Willer CJ et al. BMJ 2005;330:120–125. Vitamin D3: The Link between Sunshine and MS • Sunshine may affect MS risk via vitamin D3 • Higher circulating levels of 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 associated with a lower risk of MS in whites – Not black and Hispanic individuals1 • 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 inhibited EAE induction in mice, preventing disease progression2 1Munger KL et al. JAMA 2006;296:2832–2838; 2Cantorna MT et al. PNAS 1996;93:7861–7864. Properties of Vitamin D – Two Types • Vitamin D2 – Formed by irradiation of ergocalciferol, found in plants – Provided by some dietary sources and multivitamins – Biologically inert – Conversion (hydroxylation) in the liver and kidneys produces the active form 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol (1,25(OH)2D3) – D2 is less potent than D3 • Vitamin D3 – Naturally occurring form in humans – Formed in skin by UV light action on vitamin D precursors – Present in certain nutrients – Biologically inert – Conversion (hydroxylation) in the liver and kidneys produces the active form 1,25(OH)2D3 Sources of Vitamin D3 in Humans • Sources of vitamin D3: – Natural dietary sources limited, e.g. fish oils, fatty/oily fish, cod-liver oil – Cutaneous generation of vitamin D3 • Cutaneous vitamin D3 production is very efficient – Depends on amount of UVB radiation falling on the skin and the skin tone • A single initial MED of UVB radiation to a lightskinned individual releases approximately 20 000 IU vitamin D3 into the circulation within 24 h – Dark-skinned individuals probably require a 10-fold greater exposure time Vitamin D3 in Humans: Sunshine and Skin Colouration Months/year when sunshine cannot produce sufficient vitamin D3 in the skin1–3 No vit D for >6 m/y No vit D for 1–6 m/y No vit D for 1–6 m/y No vit D for >6 m/y Theoretical skin colour based on environmental variables1–3 1Jablonski NG, Chaplin G. J Hum Evol 2000;39:57–106; 2Jablonski NG, Chaplin G. Scientific American 2002;287:74–81; 3Chaplin G. Am J Phys Anthropol 2004;125:292–302. Courtesy of Sarah Chen Vit D all year Vitamin D3 in Humans: Supplementation • Many populations need higher sunlight exposure to increase endogenous vitamin D3 production – Would increase skin cancer risk in light-skinned individuals • Dark-skinned individuals living in northern Europe/USA cannot spend enough time in the sun to make sufficient vitamin D3 • Oral vitamin D3 supplementation should be given strong consideration Vitamin D3 in Humans: Optimum Circulating Levels Circulating 25(OH)D3 levels as related to oral vitamin D3 intake 10,000 IU/d 25(OH)D (mmol/L) 200 5,000 IU/d 150 100 1,000 IU/d 0 IU/d 50 0 0 20 40 60 80 Time (days) Heaney RP et al. Am J Clin Nutr 2003;77:204–210. 100 120 140 160 Permission granted by American Society of Nutrition Am J Clin Nutr 2003;77:204–10. 250 Vitamin D3 in Humans: Are we Getting Enough? • During winter months in high latitudes, insufficient vitamin D3 synthesised • US Nutrition Guidelines: LOAEL for vitamin D3 in humans is 2000 IU/day – Probably too low • A 1971 study gave ‘normal’ values for 25(OH)D3 from healthy volunteers when data from lifeguards (higher UVB radiation exposure) were more relevant1 • Humans probably need higher daily vitamin D3 supplements than currently permitted • Recommended daily vitamin D3 intake probably too low2 • The tolerable upper intake level for vitamin D3 should probably be raised from 2000 IU/d to 10 000 IU/d3 1Haddad JG, Chyu KJ. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1971;33:992–995; 2Vieth R et al. Am J Clin Nutr 2007;85:649–650; 3Hathcock JN et al. Am J Clin Nutr 2007;85:6–18. Can Serum Levels of 25(OH)D3 Predict MS Risk? • Objective: – To evaluate whether prior serum levels predict MS risk in healthy adults • Methods: – Prospective study on >7 million US military personnel • Results: – 257 adults with MS and 514 controls – In whites, risk of MS significantly decreased with increasing prior levels of 25(OH)D3 – Elevated 25(OH)D3 levels in whites more protective at younger ages • Conclusions: – High circulating levels of vitamin D associated with lower risk of MS Munger KL et al. JAMA 2006;296:2832–2838. Effect of Vitamin D3 on Viral Infection • 20 μg/d (800 IU/d) reduced incidence of colds and flu in African American women during the winter Number of patients 25 Placebo Vit D 20 mcg/d 20 Vit D 50 mcg/d 15 10 5 0 Winter Spring Summer Season Aloia JF et al. Epidemiol Infect 2007;12:1–4. Epub ahead of print. Fall Permission granted by Aloia JF et al. Epidemic influenza and vitamin D, 2007 Epub ahead of print. Epidemiol Infect and Cambridge University Press • Vitamin D3 supplementation associated with reduced risk of colds and flu MS in Norway • Lower incidences of MS in coastal fishing areas than inland farming/dairy areas1 – Lower butter/animal fat intake in coastal dwellers1 • Inverse relationship with vegetable and/or fish intake in the same region was smaller in magnitude, suggesting confounding factors2 1Swank RL et al. N Engl J Med 1952;246:722–728; 2Lauer K. Neurology 1997;49:S55–S61. Prevalence of MS in Norway • Prevalence data for counties in Norway (/105): – A Finnmark1 (2003) >83 – B Troms1 (2003) >104 – C Nordland (1999) 106 – D Nord Trøndelag (1999)164 C – E Oppland2 (2002) 190 – F Hordaland (2003) 151 D – G Oslo2 (2005) 154 • In Norway, MS prevalence does not rise with increasing latitude, unlike other northern European countries and the USA E • As expected, measured UV radiation G levels decrease with increasing latitude F 1Kampman MT et al. J Neurol 2007;254:471–477. 2Personal communication. A B A Study of Childhood Environmental Factors in Norway • Aim: To assess whether vitamin D3-related environmental factors in childhood and adolescence are associated with MS risk at latitudes of 66–71°N in Finnmark and Troms – Ultraviolet radiation exposure – Dietary vitamin D3 intake – Use of cod-liver oil supplements • Design: Questionnaire data from 152 MS patients and 402 controls analysed using conditional logistic regression analysis accounting for the matching variables age, sex and birthplace Kampman MT et al. J Neurol 2007;254:471–477. A Study of Childhood Environmental Factors in Norway Unadjusted odds ratio Summer outdoor activities OR† 95% CI Age 16–20 0.54 0.38–0.75 Age 11–15 0.70 Age 6–10 0.69 Pvalue Adjusted odds ratio* Pvalue OR† 95% CI 0.001 0.55 0.39–0.78 0.001 0.52–0.96 0.025 0.74 0.54–1.01 0.055 0.51–0.93 0.013 0.71 0.52–0.96 0.025 The regression analysis included 111 patients and 246 controls with complete data for all variables. *Adjusted for use of cod-liver oil supplementation and meals of boiled or fried fish. †Odds ratio per one unit change in summer outdoor activities. Kampman MT et al. J Neurol 2007;254:471–477. Reproduced from Kampman MT et al. Outdoor activities and diet in childhood and adolescence relate to MS risk above the Arctic Circle. Table 2. J Neurol 2007;254:471–477. Copyright granted by Springer Odds ratio for MS and summer outdoor activities A Study of Childhood Environmental Factors in Norway Number of patients/ controls* OR 95% CI P-value 132/295 0.73 0.44–1.21 0. 222 Low outdoor activities§ 81/118 0.57 0.31–1.05 0.072 High outdoor activities§ 63/196 1.18 0.57–2.46 0.657 Matched analysis† Subgroup analysis‡ *Lower numbers in matched analysis due to missing data; †Conditional logistic regression; ‡Unconditional logistic regression, adjustment for age and sex, stratification for summer outdoor activities age 16–20; §Low outdoor activities = not that often/a moderate amount; high outdoor activities = quite a lot/virtually all the time. Kampman MT et al. J Neurol 2007;254:471–477. Reproduced from Kampman MT et al. Outdoor activities and diet in childhood and adolescence relate to MS risk above the Arctic Circle. Table 4. J Neurol 2007;254:471–477. Copyright granted by Springer Odds ratio for MS and use of cod-liver oil supplements A Study of Childhood Environmental Factors in Norway – Conclusions • Results support the UV radiation/vitamin D3 hypothesis for MS: – Summer outdoor activities in childhood and adolescence associated with reduced risk of MS even north of the Arctic Circle – Significant effect of outdoor activities related to time spent outdoors in the summer when vitamin D3 synthesis occurs – Supplemental cod-liver oil may be protective when sun exposure reduced Kampman MT et al. J Neurol 2007;254:471–477. Vitamin D3 in Humans: Conclusions • Circulating levels of 25(OH)D3 <32 ng/ml should be considered deficient by physicians • A 200 IU/d adequate intake for vitamin D3 is possibly too low for adults • The lowest observed adverse effect level in adults (2000 IU/day) should be revised – Intake for adults probably 2000 IU/d with higher levels for special cases, e.g. pregnancy • Chronic nutritional vitamin D3 deficiency may increase the risk for developing chronic diseases, e.g. cancer, autoimmune diseases • High circulating levels of vitamin D3 may decrease MS risk • Norway is a key exception to the latitude gradient – May indicate a dietary–latitude interaction Multiple Sclerosis: Epidemiology, Genetics and Environmental Factors Infections Parasites and MS – The Hygiene Hypothesis • Many factors apart from sunlight exposure change with latitude – E.g. parasite load decreases with increasing latitude • Hygiene hypothesis – MS prevalence correlates with a high level of childhood sanitation • Parasite infections in MS patients might alter the disease course, e.g. reducing the relapse rate1 • Could early exposure to parasites reduce the risk of autoimmunity? 1Correale J et al. Ann Neurol 2007;61:97–108. Infectious Aetiology of MS: Possible Candidate Microorganisms • Chlamydia • Rubella • Herpesviruses • HTLV-1 – HHV-6 • HERV – HSV • Corona virus – CMV – EBV; HHV-4 – VZV • Canine distemper virus • Measles virus Soldan SS et al. Nat Med 1997;3:1394–1397. • Bordetella pertussis • Mumps virus Infectious Aetiology of MS: HHV-6, Chlamydia • Evidence to support HHV-6: – Increased titres of HHV-6 in MS – association controversial1–4 – HHV-6 showed a positive association in 29/37 MS studies5 – Positive association in 78% of studies (n=38) if active and latent virus differentiated6; in 55% (n=20) if pooled6 • Evidence to support chlamydia: – Conflicting reports with both positive7 and negative data8 – Meta-analysis (26 studies – 1332 MS patients, 1464 controls). Findings insufficient to establish aetiological relationship9 1Sanders VJ et al. J Neurvirol 1996;2:249–258; 2Soldan SS et al. Nat Med 1997;3:1394–1397; 3Ablashi DV et al. Mult Scler 1998;4:490–496;4Ablashi DV et al. J Clin Virol 2000;16:179–191; 5Ablashi DV. http://www.hhv-6foundation.org/febpressrelease.pdf; 6HHV Foundation. www.hhv6foundation.org;7 Munger KL et al. Epidemiology 2003;14:141–147; 8Munger KL et al. Neurology 2004;62:1799–1803; 9Bagos PG et al. Mult Scler 2006;12:379–411. EBV and MS Risk – Epidemiological Evidence • Risk of MS following infectious mononucleosis (symptomatic EBV infection) persists for 3 decades1 • MS risk very low in people never infected with EBV2 – >99% of MS patients infected with EBV (~90% of controls)3 • EBV has a potential role in MS aetiology in many sero-epidemiology studies4–8 • MS cluster occurred in 8 children after a glandular fever outbreak – all had an identical EBV subtype9 1Nielsen TR et al. Arch Neurol 2007;64:72–75; 2Thacker EL et al. Ann Neurol 2006;59:499–503; 3Ascherio A et al. Epidemiol 2000;11:220–224; 4Ascherio A et al. JAMA 2001;286:3083–3088; 5Levin LI et al. JAMA 2003;289:1533–1536; 6Levin LI et al. JAMA 2005;293:2496–2500; 7Sundstrom P et al. Neurology 2004;62:2277–2282; 8DeLorenze BN et al. Arch Neurol 2006;63:839–844; 9Munch K et al. Acta Neurol Scand 1998;98:395–399. Infectious Aetiology of MS: EBV and Paediatric MS Risk • In paediatric MS studies: – Serological evidence of EBV greatest in patients with MS Country MS patients Non-MS patients Canada1 83% 42% (n=30) (n=143) P<0.001 Multinational study2 ~80% 40% (n=72) (n=69) P<0.05 Germany3 98.6% 72.1% (n=147) (n=147) P=0.001 1Alotaibi 3Pohl S et al. JAMA 2004;291:1875–1879; 2Banwell B et al. ECTRIMS 2004, Vienna, P280; D et al. Neurology 2006;67:2063–2065. Role of EBV in MS Aetiology – Biological Evidence • Antibodies in the spinal fluid of MS subjects recognise EBV antigens1,2 • Autoimmune T-cells of an MS patient also recognised EBV3 • MS patients have a higher number of CD8+ T-cells that recognise EBV than control subjects4 • EBV reactivation may be associated with increased gadolinium-enhanced MRI activity5 1Bray PF et al. Neurology 1992;42:1798–1804; 2Cepok S et al. J Clin Invest 2005;115:1352–1360; 3Lang HLE et al. Nat Immunol 2002;3:940–943; 4Höllsberg P et al. Clin Exp Immunol 2003;132:137–143; 5Buljevac D et al. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2005;76:1377–1381. Potential Mechanisms of EBV Involvement in MS • Autoimmune – Molecular mimicry1,2 – Immortal B-cell and plasma cell theory3 – Hygiene hypothesis • Oligodendrocyte infection – New symptomatic MS lesions contain evidence of extensive oligodendrocyte apoptosis and microglial activation in tissue containing few or no lymphocytes or myelin phagocytes4 • Dual virus infection – MS-associated human endogenous retrovirus (HERV)5 • As-yet unknown mechanisms 1Lang HLE et al. Nat Immunol 2002;3:940–943; 2van Sechel AC et al. J Immunol 1999;162:129–135; 3Pender MP. Trends Immunol 2003;24:548–588; 4Barnett MH, Prineas JW. Ann Neurol 2004;55:458–468; 5Christensen T. Rev Med Virol 2005;15:179–211. Infectious Aetiology of MS: Summary • EBV infection in >99% of MS patients (~90% of controls)1 • MS rare in those without prior EBV infection • Lymphocytes in patients with active MS have an increased tendency to undergo spontaneous in vitro transformation • Higher risk of developing MS following symptomatic EBV infection/glandular fever than if no prior history • People with higher EBV antibody levels have a greater MS risk compared with those with low antibody levels2,3 1Ascherio 3Pohl A et al. Epidemiol 2000;11:220–224; 2Banwell B et al. ECTRIMS 2004, Vienna, P280; D et al. Neurology 2006;67:2063–2065. Multiple Sclerosis: Epidemiology, Genetics and Environmental Factors Immunity and the Environment Immunity and the Environment: Environmental Influence in Mice and Rats Experimental models of MS (EAE) and arthritis (CIA) identify environmental factors influencing susceptibility: • Protective factors • Risk factors – Pregnancy – Ageing – Oestrogen – Post-partum period – Stress (predator) – Stress (grouping) – Light – Darkness – Winter–spring – Summer–autumn – Parasites (adjuvant) – Parasites (adjuvant) Immunity and the Environment: Conclusions from Animal Studies • Can neutralise environmental and genetic interactions in animal models – allows identification of disease-associated genes/pathways • Strong environmental effects seen in MS and arthritis animal models • Animal studies may identify novel pathways involved in the aetiology of MS and provide targets for MS therapy The Immune System and the Environment • The immune system – Protects host from ‘foreign’ agents, usually from the environment – Recognises ‘self’ and ‘non-self’ antigens • Recognition of ‘non-self’ antigen generally results in an immune response. Immune system is usually tolerant of ‘self’ antigens • Basic components of the adaptive immune system: – T-cells expressing T-cell receptors (TCRs) – Antigen-presenting cells (APCs) • HLA molecules play a key role in immunity and thus in interactions with the environment HLA and the Environment: Antigen Presentation to T-Cells HLA molecules are crucial for initiating an immune response against foreign antigens Antibody B-cell ’Help’ CD4 T-cell Antigen 1 3 2 TCR HLA APC HLA and the Environment: Genetic Control of Survival in Epidemics 1845, 367 Dutch people emigrated to Surinam • 2 weeks after arrival, 180 died of typhoid fever • 2 years later, 37 died of yellow fewer • In 1978, 4th-generation survivors tested for 26 polymorphic genes (e.g. blood types and HLA) De Vries RR et al. J Immunogenet 1979;6:271–287. HLA and the Environment: Genetic Control of Survival in Epidemics Frequency of blood type and HLA alleles Surinam survivors n=64 Allele frequency 0.2 Dutch blood donors n>800 0.15 0.1 0.05 0 Rhesus cDE HLA-B7 De Vries RR et al. J Immunogenet 1979;6:271–287. HLA-Bw38 HLA and the Environment: Epidemic Survival and Disease Association • Expression of rare HLA alleles may be associated with survival in epidemics: – Probably due to interactions between humans and viruses, resulting in viruses targeting more common HLA alleles during their adaptation to the host • HLA allele expression is not evenly distributed: – Particular alleles are seen in specific populations – Particular alleles are associated with increased risk of various autoimmune diseases HLA and the Environment: HLA-associated Diseases Considerable data on HLA haplotype frequencies and autoimmune diseases Phenotype frequency DR4 DR3 100 DR4 DR2 B27 B47 Patients Healthy controls 50 0 MS CD RA IDDM CAH Autoimmune diseases AS HLA and the Environment: HLA and MS MS association with the DRB5*0101, DRB1*1501, DQA1*0102, DQB1*0602 haplotype DQB1 DQA1 *0602 *0102 DRB1 DRB5 DRA1 *1501 *0101 *0101 DR2 haplotype (‘European’) DR2 haplotype (‘European’) *zzzz *xxxx *xxxx *yyyy DQ6 haplotype (‘African’) HLA and the Environment: HLA and MS • More extensive linkage disequilibrium in HLA-DR2 haplotype than other Caucasian HLA haplotypes in the DR region – Maintained by positive selection?1,2 – Alleles inherited together as they co-operate to shape the T-cell repertoire • Linkage disequilibrium between DR2b and DR2a (MS-associated HLA-DR alleles at separate loci):1 – A functional epistatic interaction likely – Epistasis between DR2b and DR2a alleles associated with milder EAE – (see next slide for diagram) 1Gregersen JW et al. Nature 2006;443:574–577; 2Trowsdale J. Nat Med 2006;12:1119–1120. HLA and the Environment: HLA and MS a ? b DR2b DR2a APC DR2b APC MHCII MBP peptide EBV peptide T-cell proliferation Activationinduced cell death Severity of MS MBP peptide T-cell proliferation Severity of MS Time Primary, progressive MS Trowsdale J. Nat Med 2006; 12:1119–1120. Time Relapsing, remitting MS Reprinted by permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd: (Nat Med 2006;12:1119–1120) copyright (2007) http://www.nature.com/naturemedicine MHC haplotypes HLA and the Environment: Molecular Mimicry in MS T-cell cross-reactivity might lead to autoimmunity Common viral infection in the periphery CD4 T-cell TCR HLA Cross-reaction to myelin antigen APC CD4 T-cell TCR HLA microglia Multiple Sclerosis: Epidemiology, Genetics and Environmental Factors: Summary (1) • Twin concordance varies with background prevalence – Affected by environmental factors • Familial risk increases with proximity to index case – Identical twins have the highest risk of MS • Dizygotic twins have a higher risk than siblings, suggesting gestational environmental factor(s) – Supported by the maternal ‘parent-of-origin’ effect in half-siblings • Month-of-birth data implicate a season-related environmental factor influencing the developing foetus • Risk of MS increases with increasing latitude – probably linked to sunlight exposure Multiple Sclerosis: Epidemiology, Genetics and Environmental Factors: Summary (2) • Sunlight may operate via cutaneous vitamin D3 synthesis – Affected by sunlight exposure and skin tone • As ancient dark-skinned humans migrated from the equator to less solar radiation, selective pressure drove the development of lighter skin tones – Possibly mediated by vitamin D3 synthesis and the risk of rickets or parasitic infections • Skin tone related to autumnal UVB exposure • Effects of differential exposure to sunlight on MS risk can be offset by a high dietary vitamin D3 intake Multiple Sclerosis: Epidemiology, Genetics and Environmental Factors: Summary (3) • Vitamin D3 is important for maintaining health • Current recommended daily vitamin D3 intake combined with low levels of cutaneous synthesis may be too low • Vitamin D3 is a strong candidate for determining MS susceptibility, but other sunlight-related factors may be involved • Sero-epidemiological evidence suggests that EBV exposure increases MS risk – More evidence needed to confirm a causal link rather than an association – EBV infection does not guarantee MS • Effect of MHC is complex – linkage disequilibrium between Class I and II important in MS Multiple Sclerosis: Epidemiology, Genetics and Environmental Factors: Conclusions • Environmental effects in MS are very important and act at a population level • Sunlight, probably mediated via vitamin D3, is a strong environmental candidate • Vitamin D3 could be a common mediator of the latitude effect • Circumstantial evidence points to EBV but other autoimmune diseases show high anti-EBV titres Multiple Sclerosis: Epidemiology, Genetics and Environmental Factors How could the various factors interact to cause MS? Genetically susceptible individuals (HLA haplotype) Lack of sunlight or vitamin D3 during gestation and/or early life (latitude- or skin tone-related) Developmental alterations may result from deficiency in sunlight interfering with the maturation of the nervous and/or immune systems and the establishment of tolerance Tolerance breakdown precipitated by viral infections and non-specific immune stimulation (EBV?)