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Monocytes and neutrophils from the myeloid lineage contribute to multiple sclerosis (MS), but the dynamics of myelopoiesis during MS are unclear. Here we uncover a disease stage-specific relationship between lifestyle, myelopoiesis and neuroinflammation. In mice with relapsing-remitting experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (RR-EAE), myelopoiesis in the femur, vertebrae and spleen is elevated prior to disease onset and during remission, preceding the peaks of clinical disability and neuroinflammation. In progressive EAE (P-EAE), vertebral myelopoiesis rises steadily throughout disease, while femur and splenic myelopoiesis is elevated early before waning later during disease height. In parallel, sleep disruption or hyperlipidemia and cardiometabolic syndrome augment M-CSF generation and multi-organ myelopoiesis to worsen P-EAE clinical symptoms, neuroinflammation, and spinal cord demyelination, with M-CSF blockade abrogating these symptoms. Lastly, results from a previous trial show that Mediterranean diet restrains myelopoietic activity and myeloid lineage progenitor skewing and improves clinical symptomology of MS. Together, our data suggest that myelopoiesis in MS is dynamic and dependent on disease stage and location, and that lifestyle factors modulate disease by influencing M-CSF-mediated myelopoiesis.

Original publication

DOI

10.1038/s41467-025-59074-w

Type

Journal

Nat Commun

Publication Date

17/04/2025

Volume

16

Keywords

Animals, Myelopoiesis, Mice, Encephalomyelitis, Autoimmune, Experimental, Multiple Sclerosis, Female, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Life Style, Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor, Male, Spleen, Humans, Spinal Cord