New Landmark Nature Study Provides Long-Sought Mechanistic Link Between EBV and Multiple Sclerosis, Extending Findings from Recent Paper in Science That Identified EBV as the Leading Cause of Multiple Sclerosis
Atara Biotherapeutics (ATRA) announced significant findings linking Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection to multiple sclerosis (MS). A recent study published in Nature shows how EBV triggers immune cells to attack the myelin sheath in the central nervous system, potentially causing MS. The research indicates that nearly 100% of MS patients have been infected with EBV. Atara's investigational therapy, ATA188, targets EBV-infected B cells and is currently in a Phase 2 clinical study, highlighting its potential as a treatment option for MS.
- ATA188 targets EBV-infected B cells, providing a specific approach to MS treatment.
- Ongoing Phase 2 clinical study for ATA188 may yield promising results.
- None.
Aberrant Immune Response to EBV Protein Triggers the Immune System to Attack and Destroy Myelin, Leading to Onset and Progression of Multiple Sclerosis (MS)
Findings Reinforce Potential for ATA188 to Treat the Cause of MS by Specifically Targeting EBV-Infected B cells and Plasma Cells
Reinforces Recent Epidemiological Analysis in Science of >10 Million Individuals Over Two Decades Providing Compelling Evidence of Causality of EBV Infection and MS
MS is a chronic neurological illness affecting an estimated 2.8 million people worldwide, including approximately 900,000 in the
The Nature study adds to the known EBV-MS epidemiological connection by providing a mechanistic basis for how EBV infection can trigger the patient’s immune cells to attack self-tissue in the CNS. These findings validate molecular mimicry as one of the leading mechanisms of EBV-mediated MS, which occurs when fragments of the virus share sequence or structural similarities with certain brain proteins. The immune system may mistake these “self-proteins” for EBV. These new data reveal how EBV infection can drive the development of antibodies that target both EBV and CNS proteins, potentially leading to MS.
The researchers identified a type of antibody isolated from MS patients’ cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), which strongly binds an EBV protein, EBNA1, and cross-reacts with the central nervous system protein GlialCAM. GlialCAM is a cell adhesion molecule expressed in a variety of brain cells, including oligodendrocytes that are responsible for producing myelin, as well as on the outside of myelin sheaths. This antibody cross-reactivity between EBV and self-proteins was found to result from molecular mimicry due to key similarities between GlialCAM and EBNA1. The group also demonstrated that immunization with EBNA1 in a mouse model of MS exacerbated the disease and generated a strong antibody response against GlialCAM and EBNA1, enhancing immune cell infiltration and demyelination that are two hallmark features of human MS pathology.
“EBV may be the only risk factor required to develop MS, given essentially 100 percent of people living with MS have been infected with EBV. Until now, we didn’t have a step-by-step account of how this drives the immune system to attack a person’s own myelin sheath,” said
The Nature paper complements findings from a second publication, “Longitudinal analysis reveals high prevalence of Epstein-Barr virus associated with multiple sclerosis,” recently published in the journal Science, and collectively provide new epidemiological and molecular data confirming the role of EBV in triggering and driving the pathophysiology of MS. The cohort-based study provided compelling epidemiological evidence that EBV infection precedes the onset of MS. The study analyzed 62 million serum samples and followed >10 million individuals in the
“These studies identify EBV as the leading cause of MS and provide a direct mechanistic link between the activation of the immune system caused by EBV, and the autoimmune myelin pathology observed in MS,” said AJ Joshi, MD, Chief Medical Officer at Atara. “Specifically, these new data further link MS to EBV-infected B cells and plasma cells, highlighting the role of EBV antigens, including EBNA1 protein, in the development of the disease. Importantly ATA188, Atara’s investigational MS therapy, targets key epitopes of these antigens, including EBNA1, with the hope of ultimately delivering a new treatment option for the millions of people currently living with MS. The actively enrolling Phase 2 EMBOLD study, with a formal interim analysis planned for Q2 this year, will be a major step toward that direction.”
The complete articles are available in digital format and can be viewed via the following links:
- https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-04432-7
- https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abj8222
About Progressive Multiple Sclerosis
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic, debilitating, and potentially disabling autoimmune disease of the central nervous system (CNS) that affects myelin, a protein that helps nerves in the brain and spinal cord communicate. There are an estimated 2.8 million people living with MS worldwide, with up to ~1.2 million living with progressive forms of the disease, marked by continuous clinical decline and worsening disability. While the exact triggers of MS are not fully established, inflammation driven by environmental and genetic factors is suspected. There is growing evidence that EBV, carried by more than 90 percent of the population that infects a particular type of immune cell called the B cell, may have a role in MS and in fact may be the only risk factor identified necessary to cause MS. With few treatment options available for progressive MS and the ability of these treatments to fundamentally alter disease progression, there remains a critical unmet need.
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Forward-Looking Statements
This press release contains or may imply “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. For example, forward-looking statements include statements regarding: the development, timing, progress and prospects of ATA188 and clinical trials relating to ATA188, the potential benefits of ATA188, the safety profile of ATA188, the potential for ATA188 to treat multiple sclerosis, the potential market for ATA188, the mechanistic link between EBV and multiple sclerosis and the ability of ATA188 to specifically target such link. Because such statements deal with future events and are based on Atara’s current expectations, they are subject to various risks and uncertainties and actual results, performance or achievements of Atara could differ materially from those described in or implied by the statements in this press release. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties, including, without limitation, risks and uncertainties associated with the costly and time-consuming pharmaceutical product development process and the uncertainty of clinical success; the COVID-19 pandemic, which may significantly impact (i) our business, research, clinical development plans and operations, including our operations in
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