| Literature DB >> 35195681 |
Rafael Di Marco Barros1, Zachary Fitzpatrick2, Menna R Clatworthy1,3,4.
Abstract
The gastrointestinal tract contains trillions of microorganisms that exist symbiotically with the host due to a tolerant, regulatory cell-rich intestinal immune system. However, this intimate relationship with the microbiome inevitably comes with risks, with intestinal organisms being the most common cause of bacteremia. The vasculature of the brain-lining meninges contains fenestrated endothelium, conferring vulnerability to invasion by circulating microbes. We propose that this has evolutionarily led to close links between gut and meningeal immunity, to prime the central nervous system defense against the most likely invaders. This paradigm is exemplified by the dural venous sinus IgA defense system, where the antibody repertoire mirrors that of the gut.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35195681 PMCID: PMC8932540 DOI: 10.1084/jem.20211520
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Med ISSN: 0022-1007 Impact factor: 17.579
Figure 1.The meninges: The peripheral interface of the CNS. The meninges are composed of the dura, arachnoid, and pia mater. The dura has a bone-lining periosteal layer and an inner serous/meningeal layer that separate to accommodate the dural venous sinuses. Dural immune cells are concentrated around the wall of the dural venous sinuses, and macrophages are closely opposed to blood vessels. The arterial blood supply of the dura comes from the middle meningeal artery, with branches supplying arterial blood to the overlying calvarium and underlying dura, feeding capillary beds that drain into dural veins and ultimately into the dural venous sinus. Diploic veins drain the bone/bone marrow, and emissary veins drain the extra-cranial space into the venous sinuses. Unlike the vascular network of the CNS, which is sealed by endothelial cell tight junctions, the dural vascular bed is fenestrated, enabling blood-borne molecules and immune cells to exit the vasculature. This provides a direct means by which physically distant organs, such as the gut, may communicate with meningeal immune cells, or indeed, a potential route of entry by which systemic immune cells (including those stimulated or educated at a distal site) may enter the dura. The dural immune sinuses also receive immunological information from the CNS as CSF may drain into the sinuses via arachnoid granulations.
Figure 2.Gut-meningeal/brain communication. Homeostasis (left): Gut-educated IgA+ plasma cells localize to the dura, along the walls of the venous sinuses. Their presence is microbiome dependent, being absent in germ-free mice, and restored if the gut microbiome is reconstituted. Intestinal NK cell migration to the meninges is also microbiome dependent, and meningeal NK cells constitutively express IFN-γ in a microbiome-dependent manner. Disease (right): Meningeal IgA plasma cells and B cells increase in number during intestinal inflammation, which may reflect local proliferation as a result of microbial stimuli (PAMPs [pathogen-associated molecular patterns], e.g., LPS) spilling across a leaky gut, or direct migration from the gastrointestinal tract. In CNS inflammation, e.g., EAE or stroke, gut-educated IgA plasma cells migrate to the CNS parenchyma and modulate neuropathology via production of IL-10. Whether they travel through the dura en route to the parenchyma is unknown. In EAE, intestinal NK cells directly migrate from gut to dura, and NK cell–derived IFN-γ leads to an immunoregulatory phenotype in some astrocytes. In a mouse model of stroke, gut-derived T cells migrated to the meninges, whereas B cells migrate to both the meninges and dCLNs. In Parkinson’s disease, microbiome-derived short-chain fatty acids may contribute to microglial activation and motor deficits. Vagus nerve: The vagus nerve arises from the dorsal motor nucleus in the medulla and innervates the gastrointestinal tract, heart, and lungs, and may act as a conduit for gastrointestinal signals to access the CNS, for example gut-derived α-synuclein in Parkinson’s disease. Since it traverses the meninges en route to the CNS, it could potentially carry signals that modulate meningeal immunity.