轻浮
薄壁组织
实验性自身免疫性脑脊髓炎
病理
脑脊髓炎
生物
趋化因子
免疫学
CXCR3型
脑脊液
细胞生物学
中枢神经系统
医学
多发性硬化
炎症
趋化因子受体
神经科学
作者
Christian Schläger,Henrike Körner,Martin Krueger,Stefano Vidoli,Michael Haberl,Dorothée Mielke,Elke Brylla,Thomas B. Issekutz,Carlos Cabañas,Peter J. Nelson,Tjalf Ziemssen,Veit Rohde,Ingo Bechmann,Dmitri Lodygin,Francesca Odoardi,Alexander Flügel
出处
期刊:Nature
[Springer Nature]
日期:2016-02-01
卷期号:530 (7590): 349-353
被引量:315
摘要
In multiple sclerosis, brain-reactive T cells invade the central nervous system (CNS) and induce a self-destructive inflammatory process. T-cell infiltrates are not only found within the parenchyma and the meninges, but also in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) that bathes the entire CNS tissue. How the T cells reach the CSF, their functionality, and whether they traffic between the CSF and other CNS compartments remains hypothetical. Here we show that effector T cells enter the CSF from the leptomeninges during Lewis rat experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), a model of multiple sclerosis. While moving through the three-dimensional leptomeningeal network of collagen fibres in a random Brownian walk, T cells were flushed from the surface by the flow of the CSF. The detached cells displayed significantly lower activation levels compared to T cells from the leptomeninges and CNS parenchyma. However, they did not represent a specialized non-pathogenic cellular sub-fraction, as their gene expression profile strongly resembled that of tissue-derived T cells and they fully retained their encephalitogenic potential. T-cell detachment from the leptomeninges was counteracted by integrins VLA-4 and LFA-1 binding to their respective ligands produced by resident macrophages. Chemokine signalling via CCR5/CXCR3 and antigenic stimulation of T cells in contact with the leptomeningeal macrophages enforced their adhesiveness. T cells floating in the CSF were able to reattach to the leptomeninges through steps reminiscent of vascular adhesion in CNS blood vessels, and invade the parenchyma. The molecular/cellular conditions for T-cell reattachment were the same as the requirements for detachment from the leptomeningeal milieu. Our data indicate that the leptomeninges represent a checkpoint at which activated T cells are licensed to enter the CNS parenchyma and non-activated T cells are preferentially released into the CSF, from where they can reach areas of antigen availability and tissue damage.
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