Berger Jennifer N, Rosales Alayna, Heiden Dustin, Monogue Brendan, Beckham J David, Berg Leslie
Division of Infectious Diseases and Geographic Medicine, Department of Medicine, UT Southwestern Medical Center.
Department of Immunology and Microbiology, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus.
bioRxiv. 2025 May 16:2025.05.13.653736. doi: 10.1101/2025.05.13.653736.
The central nervous system (CNS) includes a uniquely regulated immune response that supports homeostasis, response to injury, and response to pathogens. Recent work has shown that virus-associated immune responses in the CNS may contribute to neuronal injury and long-term outcomes such as neurocognitive decline. However, the fundamental mechanisms that regulate acute infiltration of immune cells from vascular compartments into the CNS are not well defined. Using an attenuated Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus TC83 (referred to as TC83) to inoculate using olfactory and intracranial injections, we show that infection in the CNS and olfactory pathways results in rapid infiltration of both CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells as early as 3- and 5-days post-infection. CNS-infiltrating CD8+ T-cells exhibit a bystander, memory phenotype (CD49d+, Tbet+, NKG2D+, Eomes+), are cytotoxic, and are recruited independent of antigen specific responses. We show that infiltration of CD8+ bystander T-cells is supported by microglia and infiltrating macrophage expression of IL-15 and interferon expression in the CNS. These innate antiviral immune signals support activation of bystander CD8+ T-cells in the CNS that contribute to tissue injury independent of virus replication at early time points post-infection. These data support a mechanism by IL-15 stimulates bystander memory CD8+ T-cells to enter the CNS and contribute to injury independent of antigen-specific stimulation.
Prior studies have shown that virus infections in the respiratory and olfactory nerve pathways can result in long term injury in the brain. However, the mechanisms that link virus infection in the olfactory neurons and brain injury are not understood. We show that virus infection of olfactory neurons results in immune stimulation in the brain of resident immune cells to release a cytokine called IL-15 and interferon. This results in infiltration and activation of non-specific T-cells that cause injury of neurons in the brain. This may be an important mechanism by which respiratory viruses and other viruses cause inflammation and injury in the brain.
中枢神经系统(CNS)具有独特调节的免疫反应,该反应支持内环境稳定、对损伤的反应以及对病原体的反应。最近的研究表明,中枢神经系统中与病毒相关的免疫反应可能导致神经元损伤以及诸如神经认知衰退等长期后果。然而,调节免疫细胞从血管腔急性浸润到中枢神经系统的基本机制尚未明确。使用减毒的委内瑞拉马脑炎病毒TC83(简称为TC83)通过嗅觉和颅内注射进行接种,我们发现中枢神经系统和嗅觉途径中的感染早在感染后3天和5天就导致CD4 +和CD8 + T细胞迅速浸润。浸润到中枢神经系统的CD8 + T细胞表现出旁观者记忆表型(CD49d +、Tbet +、NKG2D +、Eomes +),具有细胞毒性,并且其募集独立于抗原特异性反应。我们表明,小胶质细胞以及中枢神经系统中浸润的巨噬细胞表达的IL - 15和干扰素表达支持CD8 +旁观者T细胞的浸润。这些先天性抗病毒免疫信号支持中枢神经系统中旁观者CD8 + T细胞的激活,这些细胞在感染后早期导致组织损伤,而与病毒复制无关。这些数据支持一种机制,即IL - 15刺激旁观者记忆CD8 + T细胞进入中枢神经系统并导致损伤,而与抗原特异性刺激无关。
先前的研究表明,呼吸道和嗅觉神经途径中的病毒感染可导致大脑的长期损伤。然而,嗅觉神经元中的病毒感染与脑损伤之间的联系机制尚不清楚。我们表明,嗅觉神经元的病毒感染导致驻留免疫细胞在大脑中受到免疫刺激,从而释放一种名为IL - 15的细胞因子和干扰素。这导致非特异性T细胞的浸润和激活,进而导致大脑中的神经元损伤。这可能是呼吸道病毒和其他病毒在大脑中引起炎症和损伤的重要机制。