Bardina Susana V, Brown Julia A, Michlmayr Daniela, Hoffman Kevin W, Sum Janet, Pletnev Alexander G, Lira Sergio A, Lim Jean K
The Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York, USA.
Department of Microbiology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York, USA.
J Virol. 2017 Apr 28;91(10). doi: 10.1128/JVI.02409-16. Print 2017 May 15.
West Nile virus (WNV) is a mosquito-transmitted flavivirus that can cause debilitating encephalitis. To delineate the mechanisms behind this pathology, we studied Ccr7-deficient mice, which afforded us the capacity to study infection in mice with disrupted peripheral cellular trafficking events. The loss of Ccr7 resulted in an immediate pan-leukocytosis that remained elevated throughout the infection. This leukocytosis resulted in a significant enhancement of leukocyte accumulation within the central nervous system (CNS). Despite an excess of virus-specific T cells in the CNS, Ccr7-deficient mice had significantly higher CNS viral loads and mortality rates than wild-type animals. Mechanistically, the elevated trafficking of infected myeloid cells into the brain in Ccr7-deficient mice resulted in increased levels of WNV in the CNS, thereby effectively contributing to neuroinflammation and lowering viral clearance. Combined, our experiments suggest that during WNV infection, Ccr7 is a gatekeeper for nonspecific viral transference to the brain. In this study, we show that Ccr7 is required for the sufficient migration of dendritic cells and T cells into the draining lymph node immediately following infection and for the restriction of leukocyte migration into the brain. Further, the severe loss of dendritic cells in the draining lymph node had no impact on viral replication in this organ, suggesting that WNV may migrate from the skin into the lymph node through another mechanism. Most importantly, we found that the loss of Ccr7 results in a significant leukocytosis, leading to hypercellularity within the CNS, where monocytes/macrophages contribute to CNS viremia, neuroinflammation, and increased mortality. Together, our data point to Ccr7 as a critical host defense restriction factor limiting neuroinflammation during acute viral infection.
西尼罗河病毒(WNV)是一种通过蚊子传播的黄病毒,可导致使人衰弱的脑炎。为了阐明这种病理背后的机制,我们研究了Ccr7基因缺陷小鼠,这使我们能够研究外周细胞运输事件被破坏的小鼠的感染情况。Ccr7的缺失导致立即出现全血细胞增多症,并且在整个感染过程中一直保持升高。这种白细胞增多症导致中枢神经系统(CNS)内白细胞积聚显著增加。尽管中枢神经系统中有过量的病毒特异性T细胞,但Ccr7基因缺陷小鼠的中枢神经系统病毒载量和死亡率明显高于野生型动物。从机制上讲,Ccr7基因缺陷小鼠中受感染的髓样细胞向大脑的运输增加,导致中枢神经系统中WNV水平升高,从而有效地促进了神经炎症并降低了病毒清除率。综合来看,我们的实验表明,在WNV感染期间,Ccr7是阻止非特异性病毒转移至大脑的守门人。在本研究中,我们表明,感染后Ccr7对于树突状细胞和T细胞充分迁移至引流淋巴结以及限制白细胞迁移至大脑是必需的。此外,引流淋巴结中树突状细胞的严重缺失对该器官中的病毒复制没有影响,这表明WNV可能通过另一种机制从皮肤迁移至淋巴结。最重要的是,我们发现Ccr7的缺失导致显著的白细胞增多症,导致中枢神经系统内细胞增多,其中单核细胞/巨噬细胞导致中枢神经系统病毒血症、神经炎症并增加死亡率。总之,我们的数据表明Ccr7是急性病毒感染期间限制神经炎症的关键宿主防御限制因子。