For years, Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) has been linked to multiple sclerosis.
The association was strong.
But the mechanism remained frustratingly abstract - until now.🧵
This new paper in Cell (2026) finally does what’s been missing.
It doesn’t just connect EBV and MS statistically -
it shows how the immune system gets it wrong.
Instead of focusing on antibodies, the authors look at CD4+ T cells.
Long-lived memory cells.
The ones that shape immune behavior over decades.
They find something striking.
More than half of people with MS have T cells that react to ANO2 -
a normal human protein expressed in the central nervous system.
ANO2 is not viral.
It’s not foreign.
It’s part of us.
So why would antiviral T cells target it?
The answer turns out to be EBV.
Specifically, T cells originally trained against EBNA1, a key EBV antigen.
The same T cell clones that recognize EBNA1
also recognize ANO2.
Same receptors. Same clones.
Two very different targets.
This is the turning point.
MS doesn’t look like overactive immunity here.
It looks like misdirected immune memory.
The immune system learns EBV early in life
and carries that memory forever. In some people, that memory is reused -
but aimed at the wrong target.
These are not quiet, harmless memory cells.
They show an activated, cytotoxic profile.
They are ready to act.
EBV infects almost everyone.
Yet only a small fraction develop MS.
So something else must decide who is at risk.
That something else is antigen presentation.
In this study, cross-reactive T cells are enriched in people carrying HLA-DRB1*15:01.
HLA doesn’t cause disease.
It shapes what the immune system learns to see.
If your HLA molecules present EBNA1 peptides
that closely resemble ANO2 peptides,
you create the conditions for molecular mimicry.
When these cells are activated in animal models,
disease becomes more severe.
More inflammation, more relapses, more damage.
Crucially, this pathology is not antibody-driven.
It is driven by persistent, antigen-experienced T cells
that don’t switch off.
Olivia G. Thomas at al., Anoctamin-2-specific T cells link Epstein-Barr virus to multiple sclerosis. cell.com/cell/fulltext/…
Now take a step sideways.
This mechanism is not unique to multiple sclerosis.
In long COVID, EBV reactivation appears again and again.
Often dismissed as incidental.
Possibly it isn’t.
Acute SARS infection creates intense inflammatory and immunological stress.
In that environment, latent viruses - especially EBV - can reawaken. Not in everyone. Not always easy to document. But often enough to matter.
Reactivated EBV means renewed exposure to EBV antigens, including EBNA1.
And that sustains EBV-specific T cell clones!
This study shows why that matters.
Those clones can carry an autoimmune side effect -
molecular mimicry that redirects them toward self-tissue.
Seen this way, SARS-CoV-2 may not be the sole culprit.
It may act as a trigger,
amplifying EBV-focused immune activity in a genetically permissive host.
Add immunological imprinting.
The immune system tends to reuse familiar strategies,
even when circumstances change.
In the MS study, cross-reactive T cells cluster in activated and cytotoxic states.
These are precisely the cells you don’t want making targeting errors.
Translated to long COVID.
Chronic immune stimulation + latent viruses + HLA context
increase the risk that antiviral immunity becomes pathological.
The common thread is persistence.
In MS, EBV persists for life.
In long COVID, multiple sources of chronic immune signaling may coexist.
MS now gives us a clean mechanistic proof.
Other post-infectious conditions may be variations on the same theme.
This doesn’t mean everyone with long COVID has autoimmunity.
It means the terrain is dangerous -
and biology sets the limits.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
A new macaque study looked at how immune memory forms after infections with different SARS-CoV-2 variants.
The main pattern is familiar from other viruses -
immune imprinting tends to stay biased toward earlier variants, even after later infections.🧵
The model is useful because it allows sequential infections under controlled conditions (Wuhan - Delta - Omicron), something that’s hard to observe clearly in humans.
Omicron as a primary infection = relatively weak new immune imprint
After first Omicron infection in macaques -
variant-specific anti-Omicron RBD antibodies developed slowly
overall immunogenicity was lower
T-cell responses were also weaker.
A new study in Neuron links nuclear pore breakdown to TDP-43 pathology in ALS and related dementias.
This pathway is especially relevant because SARS-CoV-2 can both cleave TDP-43 and disrupt nuclear transport - potentially hitting the same vulnerability from two directions.🧵
The nuclear pore is a critical cellular gate.
It regulates the movement of RNA and proteins between the nucleus and cytoplasm.
In ALS and some dementias, this gate is known to fail - and TDP-43 leaves the nucleus and accumulates in toxic aggregates.
But why the pore breaks down has been unclear.
The study identifies a key player - VCP.
Normally, it acts as a cellular cleanup system, removing damaged proteins.
The problem arises when it becomes overactive.
A new study in Frontiers in Medicine analyzed 959 hospitalized COVID-19 patients (pre-vaccination).
It shows that T cell counts at admission strongly predict severe outcomes and mortality.
This isn’t just about inflammation - adaptive immunity is central🧵
Patients with CD3 T cells ≤ 666/mm³ had
2.3× higher risk of needing ventilatory support
2.4× higher risk of in-hospital death
CD4 ≤ 359/mm³ was associated with
2.8× higher risk of death
These associations remained independent after adjustment.
The study supports a model in which
T-cell responses (especially CD3/CD4) are weakened
Adaptive immunity fails to adequately control the virus
The body compensates through hyperactivation of innate immunity
The result is severe disease
This study suggests that in some patients, COVID-19 triggers a long-term process of vascular and cardiac injury that can gradually increase pulmonary pressure, strain the right ventricle, and raise the risk of death in the following years🧵
The study followed 480 hospitalized patients (240 moderate, 240 severe) for one year after discharge. It assessed heart function using echocardiography and measured biomarkers of vascular inflammation.
In severe COVID-19, right-ventricular function was already significantly worse at the first study examination. Over the following year, pulmonary artery pressure increased by 17.8% in severe cases and 7.1% in moderate cases!
If normal population plasma truly carries more low-grade inflammation, this study hints at a fork in the road.
Either we lower the bar and call it a new normal,
or this is a hidden population burden that will surface later as comorbidities🧵
A new study on the cytokine IL-32 after COVID-19 points directly at this uncomfortable question.
The authors analyzed nearly 1,000 healthy blood donors sampled before and during the pandemic, plus 212 hospitalized COVID-19 patients.
The result is consistent - plasma collected after 2020 shows systematically higher IL-32 levels compared to pre-pandemic plasma.
A new population-level study from Singapore looked at 1.4 million COVID cases in a setting with >90% booster coverage.
Result - multi-organ Long COVID largely attenuates.
But the brain remains an exception.
The study tracked new medical diagnoses 31–300 days after infection across Delta and multiple Omicron waves (BA.1/2, BA.4/5, XBB).
Across variants, most organ systems normalize.
Neurocognitive diagnoses do not.