• About
CMM
Karolinska institutet
Karolinska universitetssjukhuset
Sök

New mechanism links Epstein-Barr virus to MS

The immune system’s reaction to the common Epstein-Barr virus can ultimately damage the brain and contribute to multiple sclerosis (MS). This is shown by new research mainly conducted from and at CMM and published in Cell. The study provides new insight into the long-suspected link between Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and MS.

Multiple sclerosis is a chronic inflammatory disease in which the immune system attacks the central nervous system and causes nerve damage. It has long been known that everyone who develops MS has had an infection with the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), but exactly how the virus contributes to the disease has been unclear.

The new study shows that when the immune system fights EBV, certain T cells – which normally attack the virus – can also react to a protein in the brain called Anoctamin-2 (ANO2). This phenomenon is called molecular mimicry – immune cells mistaking the body’s own proteins for those of the virus. The researchers found that these cross-reactive T cells are significantly more common in people with MS than in healthy controls. The study builds on previous research showing that misdirected antibodies after EBV infection may play a role.

“Our results provide mechanistic evidence that immune responses to EBV can directly damage the brain in MS. It is a complex neurological disease, and it may be that the molecular mechanisms vary between patients,” says the study’s first author, Olivia Thomas, assistant professor at the Department of Clinical Neuroscience at Karolinska Institutet and CMM Team Leader.

Olivia Thomas. Photo: Erik Holmgren.

The study is based on analyses of blood samples from people with MS and compared with healthy controls. The researchers were able to isolate T cells that react to both the EBV protein EBNA1 and ANO2 from people with MS. In addition, experiments in a mouse model showed that these cells can exacerbate MS-like symptoms and cause damage to the brain. According to the researchers, the results may help explain why some people develop MS after an EBV infection while others do not.

“This discovery opens up new treatments that target these cross-reactive immune cells. Since several EBV vaccines are now being tested in clinical trials, the results may be of great importance for future preventive efforts,” says Professor Tomas Olsson, who led the study together with Associate Professor Andre Ortlieb Guerreiro-Cacais at the same institution and who are CMM Group and Team Leaders, respectively.

André Ortlieb-Cacais. Photo: Private.
Tomas Olsson. Photo: Andreas Andersson.

The study is a collaboration between several research groups at Karolinska Institutet and CMM and has been funded by, among others, the Swedish Research Council, the EU’s Horizon program, the Swedish Brain Foundation, and the Swedish Neurological Association. Several of the article’s authors have links to pharmaceutical companies; see the scientific article for a complete list of conflicts of interest.

This text is based on an article published on the Karolinska Institutet news site.

The study was also covered in an article in Dagens Nyheter.

Publication: “Anoctamin-2-specific T Cells Link Epstein-Barr Virus to Multiple Sclerosis” Olivia G. Thomas, Urszula Rykaczewska, Marina Galešić, Rianne T. M. van der Burgt, Nils Hallén, Filippo Ferro, Mattias Bronge, Zoe Marti, Yue Li, Alexandra Hill Riqué, Jianing Lin, Aleksa Krstic, Alicja Gromadzka, András Levente Szonder, Chiara Sorini, María Reina-Campos, Ting Sun, Leslie A. Rubio Rodríguez-Kirby, Özge Dumral, Rasmus Berglund, Majid Pahlevan Kakhki, Milena Z. Adzemovic, Manuel Zeitelhofer, Birce Akpinar, Katarina Tengvall, Ola B. Nilsson, Erik Holmgren, Chiara Starvaggi Cucuzza, Klara Asplund Högelin, Guro Gafvelin, Katharina Fink, Gonçalo Castelo-Branco, Maria Needhamsen, Mohsen Khademi, Fredrik Piehl, Torbjörn Gräslund, Lars Alfredsson, Harald Lund, Per Uhlén, Ingrid Kockum, Roland Martin, Maja Jagodic, Hans Grönlund, André Ortlieb Guerreiro-Cacais, Tomas Olsson, Cell, online January 13, 2026, doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2025.12.032

For more information, please contact:
Olivia Thomas, Assistant Professor
Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet
Email: olivia.thomas@ki.se
Phone: +46 730 58 37 25

Tomas Olsson, Professor
Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet
Email: tomas.olsson@ki.se
Phone: +4670 72 13 59 8

About CMM

The Center for Molecular Medicine (CMM) is a foundation instituted by the Stockholm County Council (Region Stockholm). CMM is at the heart of a close partnership with the Karolinska University Hospital and Karolinska Institutet, fueling advancements in biomedical and clinical research.

Contact

Center for Molecular Medicine Foundation, org. nr. 815201-3689

Karolinska University Hospital L8:05

Visionsgatan 18

171 76 Stockholm, Sweden

communication@cmm.se

CMM
Karolinska institutet
Karolinska universitetssjukhuset