Loading icon
The MS Risk You’re Born With: T-Cell Fingerprint Hidden in Our Genes
The MS Risk You’re Born With: T-Cell Fingerprint Hidden in Our Genes

Most people think of multiple sclerosis (MS) as a disease that begins when symptoms appear in adulthood, but this study suggests part of the story may be written much earlier. Using a large population-based cohort of healthy six-year-old children, researchers found that higher genetic risk for MS was associated with a subtle but consistent shift in immune “balance”—especially fewer CD8+ T cells (notably naïve CD8+ cells) and a higher CD4/CD8 ratio—patterns that echo immune signatures reported in MS patients. Rather than implying destiny, the findings humanize MS risk as a long-term biological trajectory: inherited variants, particularly in the HLA region, may gently tune immune development years before anyone feels unwell, offering a clearer window into how susceptibility might accumulate over time.

Read more