Institute of Neuroimmunology, Institute for Multiple Sclerosis Research, University Medical Centre Göttingen, 37073 Göttingen, Germany.
Institute of Anatomy, University of Leipzig, 04103 Leipzig, Germany.
Nature. 2016 Feb 18;530(7590):349-53. doi: 10.1038/nature16939. Epub 2016 Feb 10.
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.
在多发性硬化症中,脑反应性 T 细胞侵入中枢神经系统 (CNS) 并引发自我破坏的炎症过程。T 细胞浸润不仅存在于实质和脑膜中,也存在于脑脊液 (CSF) 中,脑脊液可浸润整个 CNS 组织。T 细胞如何到达 CSF、它们的功能以及它们是否在 CSF 和其他 CNS 隔室之间迁移仍然是假设的。在这里,我们展示了效应 T 细胞在实验性自身免疫性脑脊髓炎 (EAE) 期间从软脑膜进入 CSF,EAE 是多发性硬化症的一种模型。当 T 细胞在胶原纤维的三维软脑膜网络中随机布朗运动时,CSF 的流动会将它们从表面冲洗掉。与来自软脑膜和 CNS 实质的 T 细胞相比,分离的细胞显示出明显较低的激活水平。然而,它们并不代表一种专门的非致病性细胞亚群,因为它们的基因表达谱与组织来源的 T 细胞非常相似,并且它们完全保留了致脑炎的潜力。整合素 VLA-4 和 LFA-1 与驻留巨噬细胞产生的相应配体结合,可阻止 T 细胞从软脑膜上分离。趋化因子信号通过 CCR5/CXCR3 传递,以及与软脑膜巨噬细胞接触的 T 细胞的抗原刺激,增强了它们的黏附性。漂浮在 CSF 中的 T 细胞可以通过类似于 CNS 血管中血管黏附的步骤重新附着到软脑膜上,并侵入实质。T 细胞重新附着的分子/细胞条件与从软脑膜环境中分离的要求相同。我们的数据表明,软脑膜代表一个检查点,在此处激活的 T 细胞被许可进入 CNS 实质,而未激活的 T 细胞则优先释放到 CSF 中,从那里它们可以到达抗原存在和组织损伤的区域。