Central nervous system (CNS) lesions typical of multiple sclerosis (MS) are characterized by demyelinating inflammatory infiltrates that contain few CNS antigen-specific autoreactive T cells and a multitude of pathogenic non-antigen-specific mononuclear cells. Here, we report that in patients with MS the combined action of interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha), interleukin (IL)-2, and IL-6 leads to the activation of most peripheral T cells (mainly CD4 memory) by promoting a persistent intracellular calcium increase via two independent signaling pathways. The activation of these pathways, one activated by IFNgamma and the other by the combination TNFalpha/IL-2/IL-6, is independent from myelin antigens and precedes by 2 weeks phases of disease activity (eg, clinical relapses and/or appearance of gadolinium-enhancing lesions on brain magnetic resonance imaging scans during 1 year of follow-up). Our results indicate that an appropriate combination of the four cytokines, three with a proinflammatory profile and one necessary for T-cell growth and differentiation, can activate in an antigen-independent fashion most peripheral T cells from MS patients. This mechanism is likely to contribute to the recruitment of nonspecific lymphocytes into the cellular activation processes leading to CNS demyelination and may represent a major target for immune intervention in MS.