| Literature DB >> 28942919 |
Motohiko Kadoki1, Ashwini Patil2, Cornelius C Thaiss1, Donald J Brooks1, Surya Pandey1, Deeksha Deep1, David Alvarez3, Ulrich H von Andrian3, Amy J Wagers4, Kenta Nakai2, Tarjei S Mikkelsen4, Magali Soumillon4, Nicolas Chevrier5.
Abstract
A fundamental challenge in immunology is to decipher the principles governing immune responses at the whole-organism scale. Here, using a comparative infection model, we observe immune signal propagation within and between organs to obtain a dynamic map of immune processes at the organism level. We uncover two inter-organ mechanisms of protective immunity mediated by soluble and cellular factors. First, analyzing ligand-receptor connectivity across tissues reveals that type I IFNs trigger a whole-body antiviral state, protecting the host within hours after skin vaccination. Second, combining parabiosis, single-cell analyses, and gene knockouts, we uncover a multi-organ web of tissue-resident memory T cells that functionally adapt to their environment to stop viral spread across the organism. These results have implications for manipulating tissue-resident memory T cells through vaccination and open up new lines of inquiry for the analysis of immune responses at the organism level.Entities:
Keywords: T cell memory; organismal immunology; single-cell analysis; systems biology; vaccines
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28942919 PMCID: PMC7895295 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2017.08.024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 66.850