4.8 Article

Lymphatic Vessels Balance Viral Dissemination and Immune Activation following Cutaneous Viral Infection

Journal

CELL REPORTS
Volume 20, Issue 13, Pages 3176-3187

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2017.09.006

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Funding

  1. OHSU Knight Cancer Center [NIH P30-CA069533]
  2. Medical Research Foundation of Oregon
  3. Collins Medical Trust
  4. Oregon National Primate Research Center [8P51 OD011092]
  5. NIH/NCI Ruth L. Kirchstein National Research Service [T32-CA106195]
  6. Department of Defense [W81XWH-15-1-0348]
  7. Cancer Research Institute
  8. V Foundation for Cancer Research [V2015-024]
  9. Melanoma Research Alliance [403181]
  10. [U19AI100948]

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Lymphatic vessels lie at the interface between peripheral sites of pathogen entry, adaptive immunity, and the systemic host. Though the paradigm is that their open structure allows for passive flow of infectious particles from peripheral tissues to lymphoid organs, virus applied to skin by scarification does not spread to draining lymph nodes. Using cutaneous infection by scarification, we analyzed the effect of viral infection on lymphatic transport and evaluated its role at the host-pathogen interface. We found that, in the absence of lymphatic vessels, canonical lymph-node-dependent immune induction was impaired, resulting in exacerbated pathology and compensatory, systemic priming. Furthermore, lymphatic vessels decouple fluid and cellular transport in an interferon-dependent manner, leading to viral sequestration while maintaining dendritic cell transport for immune induction. In conclusion, we found that lymphatic vessels balance immune activation and viral dissemination and act as an innatelike'' component of tissue host viral defense.

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