Immune Reaction to Milk Protein May Explain Dairy’s Link to MS

Stuart SchlossmanMS Research Study and Reports

 

Immune system reaction to casein, a protein in cow’s milk, can trigger an inflammatory neurological disease in mice that’s similar to multiple sclerosis (MS) and includes the loss of myelin, a study reported.

“These results identify how consumption of milk and milk products may exacerbate the autoimmune response in MS,” its researchers wrote.

The study, “Antibody cross-reactivity between casein and myelin-associated glycoprotein results in central nervous system demyelination,” was published in PNAS.

Reports linking cow’s milk consumption to a greater risk of developing MS date back as far as the 1970s, and many patients report feeling worse when they consume dairy. However, a biological mechanism that could explain this connection has been lacking.

“We hear again and again from [MS patients] that they feel worse when they consume milk, cottage cheese or yogurt. We are interested in the cause of this correlation,” Stefanie Kürten, MD, a study co-author with the Institute of Anatomy at University Hospital Bonn in Germany, said in a press release.

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To learn more, the researchers immunized mice with several different components found in milk. That is, the mice were injected with the milk components as well as with substances to promote an immune response.


Mice immunized with the milk protein called casein exhibited motor weakness and disorientation, and analyses of their brains and spinal cords showed significant inflammation and myelin loss. These features are broadly similar to what is seen in MS, which is caused by an autoimmune attack that damages the myelin sheath, a fatty coating around nerve fibers that helps them send electrical signals.

Notably, mice immunized with other milk components did not develop this MS-like disease.

Further analyses in the mice immunized with casein showed no inflammatory immune cells at the sites of myelin loss. However, there were high levels of antibodies, which are proteins made by the immune system that can drive autoimmunity in diseases like MS.

A given antibody is able to bind with extremely high specificity to a particular molecular target, referred to as the antibody’s antigen. In further tests, the researchers showed that antibodies from casein-immunized mice were able to bind to antigens in the brain.

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