Familial hemiplegic migraine is an autosomal dominant disorder of unknown pathogenesis in which the migrainous attacks are marked by the occurrence of a transient hemiplegia during the aura. While investigating CADASIL, mapped previously to chromosome 19, we observed that some patients had recurrent attacks of migraine with aura. Although the clinical and neuroimaging features of familial hemiplegic migraine differ markedly from CADASIL, we hypothesized that the same gene could be involved in the pathogenesis of both conditions. We chose two large pedigrees for linkage analysis of familial hemiplegic migraine. A maximum lod score > 8 was found with two markers that are also strongly linked to CADASIL. Multilocus linkage analysis suggested that the loci responsible for the two diseases reside within an interval of about 30 cM on chromosome 19.
T cell lines and clones specific for human myelin basic protein (BP) were selected from three multiple sclerosis (MS) patients and two healthy subjects and tested for their proliferative responses to a battery of synthetic peptides, 9 to 21 amino acid residues long. The combined amino acid sequence of the peptides spanned the complete sequence of the human BP. The results suggest the development of T cells sensitized to at least four independent regions of the human BP, indicating some diversity of the human T cell repertoire to BP. However, an immunodominant T cell epitope was located in the C-terminal region, defined by residues 149-162. This epitope was recognized by T cells from three subjects out of five (one MS patient and both healthy controls) in the context of different DR specificities. Another epitope (located in the 57-75 region) which triggered one MS patient's T cell response was also recognized by a mycobacteria-specific T cell clone cross-reacting with BP.
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