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Sex-associated and disease state-dependent monocyte polarization and CNS-trafficking phenotypes in pediatric acute-onset neuropsychiatric syndrome (PANS).

Abstract

Pediatric acute-onset neuropsychiatric syndrome (PANS) is characterized by the sudden onset of obsessive-compulsive symptoms alongside a constellation of neuropsychiatric and somatic features. Disease progression typically includes flare and recovery states, with some patients exhibiting a persistent disease course (> 12 months of flare). We characterized circulating monocyte subsets during flare and recovery in pediatric patients with PANS, uncovering disease-state-dependent shifts in polarization and trafficking phenotypes. Inflammatory M1-like monocytes and monocyte-derived dendritic cells were elevated during flare, while anti-inflammatory M2-like monocytes were enriched in recovery. We also identified a circulating subset with a surface phenotype consistent with central nervous system (CNS) homing, which was reduced during flare and restored in recovery. These cells were detectable in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of new-onset patients but not in persistent cases, suggesting differential compartmentalization during disease progression. Notably, monocyte phenotypes, including M2 polarization (monocytosis) and circulating CNS-homing profiles, exhibited striking sex-associated differences, particularly during recovery, with several subsets enriched in males but not females. Plasma from flare-phase patients modestly induced CNS-homing markers in monocytes from healthy donors, indicating the presence of circulating modulators. Together, these findings support a model in which distinct myeloid phenotypes-including sex-biased patterns-may contribute to both the pathogenesis and resolution of neuroinflammation in PANS.

Authors: Rahman SS, Hussein N, Galfrè SG, Gaertner F, Macaubas C, Chan A, Columbo L, Gao J, Galehdari S, Bayram B, Ma M, Manko C, Miles K, Farhadian B, Silverman M, Thienemann M, Or-Geva N, Van Haren K, Nadeau KC, Tian L, Frankovich J, Mellins ED,
Journal: J Neuroinflammation;2025Nov18; 22 (1) 273. doi:10.1186/s12974-025-03549-6
Year: 2025
PubMed: PMID: 41254741 (Go to PubMed)