Zdenek Vrozina Profile picture
Jan 14 20 tweets 3 min read Read on X
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.

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More from @ZdenekVrozina

Apr 7
Another piece of the puzzle. Post-COVID changes are not just an isolated problem affecting a few unlucky individuals. They appear to have consequences at the population level🧵
A striking headline from Austria - 4 in 10 people report smell or taste problems.
That figure comes from a new cross-sectional survey of 2340 adults in Austria, Germany, and Switzerland looking at self-reported smell and taste disorders after the COVID era.
The key point is that this was not mainly about complete smell loss.
The most commonly reported problems were olfactory intolerance, phantosmia, and parosmia - in other words, abnormal, distorted, or intrusive smell experiences.
Read 12 tweets
Apr 7
The Karaviti study is finally in print, which makes this a good time to revisit it. It shows that subclinical myocardial injury in children after COVID-19 may not be something exceptional🧵
The key point is often missed. This was not mainly a comparison of children with Long Covid versus children without Long Covid. It compared
children after COVID-19
healthy controls without prior SARS-CoV-2 exposure
In that comparison, conventional echocardiographic measures did not differ significantly, but the post-COVID group showed worse left ventricular global longitudinal strain (LV GLS).
Read 13 tweets
Apr 6
This study suggests a possible mechanism for how SARS-CoV-2 could harm neurons in the inner ear.
Not mainly through inflammation, but potentially through a more direct effect on spiral ganglion neurons, involving disrupted mTOR signaling, abnormal stress granules, and eventually - apoptosis🧵
That matters because spiral ganglion neurons are not some minor supporting cells. They are the neurons - that carry sound information from the cochlea into the auditory pathway.
If they are damaged, the problem is not just in the ear. It affects the neural transmission of sound itself.
The authors try to map out an actual chain of events. In their model, infection - and especially spike related effects - seems to disturb the cell’s stress-response machinery.
Stress granules start accumulating abnormally, mTOR signaling drops, and the neuron is pushed closer to cell death.
Read 9 tweets
Apr 4
A new paper looks at shared molecular mechanisms between COVID-19 and Parkinson’s disease. It does not show that COVID causes Parkinson’s.
What it does ask is whether the two conditions share biologically meaningful pathways🧵
The authors identified 77 overlapping differentially expressed genes across COVID-19 and Parkinson’s datasets. The main signal points to inflammation-related pathways plus signs of dopaminergic neuron dysfunction!
Their main candidate is CHI3L1. In the single-cell analysis, CHI3L1 was especially elevated in astrocytes from severe COVID-19 brain tissue, which led the authors to propose an astrocyte - CHI3L1 - neuroinflammation axis as one possible explanation for why infection might worsen neurological outcomes.
Read 13 tweets
Apr 3
A new population based study from Stockholm sends a pretty troubling signal.
During follow-up, a cardiovascular event occurred in 20.6% of men and 18.2% of women with diagnosed long COVID.🧵
In the control group without long COVID, the numbers were much lower. 11.1% for men and 8.4% for women.
These were not mainly patients recovering from severe acute COVID or ICU stays. The study focused on non-hospitalized adults aged 18-65 with no prior cardiovascular disease!
Read 14 tweets
Apr 2
A new 2026 paper looks at a possible mechanism behind rare myocarditis after COVID-19 mRNA vaccination.
Not vaccines broadly damage the heart.
More like
some people may be biologically more vulnerable than others🧵
The paper’s central idea is mitochondrial vulnerability.
In simple English
your mitochondria can seem mostly fine under normal conditions, but still handle stress badly when the system gets pushed.
That matters because this study is trying to explain a rare adverse event, not argue that this is happening across the whole population.
That distinction is everything.
Read 25 tweets

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