New PILOT publication by Gres et al.
PILOT postdoc Vitka Gres, alongside PILOT project leader Philipp Henneke and other PILOT researchers, published a new research article in Science Immunology.
Here, they investigated the impact of bacterial infection on different aspects of CNS immunology. Find the abstract and the link to the full article below.
Abstract
Macrophages in the meninges contribute to immune defense of the central nervous system (CNS), yet their site-specific origin and function remain poorly understood. Using an intravenous model of streptococcal meningoencephalitis in mice, we found bacteria predominantly in the leptomeninges and dura. Nevertheless, monocyte infiltration into the leptomeninges and parenchyma strongly correlated with disease severity. In the dura, infection triggered activation and loss of resident macrophages, followed by rapid engraftment of inflammatory monocytes that transiently replenished the macrophage niche. Under homeostasis, dural monocytes were supplied CCR2 independently from adjacent skull bone marrow. During infection, this local source was insufficient, necessitating recruitment from peripheral bone marrow. Infection further reshaped monocyte ontogeny, increasing monocyte–dendritic cell progenitor–derived monocytes, which expressed higher major histocompatibility complex class II levels and persisted in the brain alongside CD4+ T cells during resolution. Together, these findings reveal dynamic, compartment-specific remodeling of monocyte recruitment and differentiation across CNS borders during bacterial meningoencephalitis.
Full article: https://doi.org/10.1126/sciimmunol.aee9584