4.7 Article

CNS-derived CCL21 is both sufficient to drive homeostatic CD4+T cell proliferation and necessary for efficient CD4+T cell migration into the CNS parenchyma following Toxoplasma gondii infection

期刊

BRAIN BEHAVIOR AND IMMUNITY
卷 25, 期 5, 页码 883-896

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbi.2010.09.014

关键词

Autoimmunity; Glia; Lymphopenia; Microglia; Multiple sclerosis; Neuroinflammation; Neurodegeneration; T cell trafficking

资金

  1. NIH [NS045735, AI63426]
  2. Dana Foundation
  3. CRCC
  4. UCR Division of Biomedical Sciences
  5. UCR academic senate

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Injury, infection and autoimmune triggers increase CNS expression of the chemokine CCL21. Outside the CNS. CCL21 contributes to chronic inflammatory disease and autoimmunity by three mechanisms: recruitment of lymphocytes into injured or infected tissues, organization of inflammatory infiltrates into lymphoid-like structures and promotion of homeostatic CD4+ T-cell proliferation. To test if CCL21 plays the same role in CNS inflammation, we generated transgenic mice with astrocyte-driven expression of CCL21 (GFAP-CCL21 mice). Astrocyte-produced CCL21 was bioavailable and sufficient to support homeostatic CD4+ 1-cell proliferation in cervical lymph nodes even in the absence of endogenous CCL19/CCL21. However, lymphocytes and glial-activation were not detected in the brains of uninfected GFAP-CCL21 mice, although CCL21 levels in GFAP-CCL21 brains were higher than levels expressed in inflamed Toxoplasma-infected non-transgenic brains. Following Toxoplasma infection, T-cell extravasation into submeningeal, perivascular and ventricular sites of infected CNS was not CCL21-dependent, occurring even in CCL19/CCL21-deficient mice. However, migration of extravasated CD4+, but not CD8+ T cells from extra-parenchymal CNS sites into the CNS parenchyma was CCL21-dependent. CD4+ T cells preferentially accumulated at perivascular, submeningeal and ventricular spaces in infected CCL21/CCL19-deficient mice. By contrast, greater numbers of CD4+ T cells infiltrated the parenchyma of infected GFAP-CCL21 mice than in wild-type or CCL19/CCL21-deficient mice. Together these data indicate that CCL21 expression within the CNS has the potential to contribute to T cell-mediated CNS pathology via: (a) homeostatic priming of CD4+ T-lymphocytes outside the CNS and (b) by facilitating CD4+ T-cell migration into parenchymal sites following pathogenic insults to the CNS. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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