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To the Brain and Back: Migratory Paths of Dendritic Cells in Multiple Sclerosis

Journal

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jnen/nlx114

Keywords

Blood-brain barrier; Blood-CSF barriers; Central nervous system; Dendritic cell migration; Multiple sclerosis

Funding

  1. Special Research Fund (BOF) from the University of Antwerp, Belgium [PS 28313, 31967]
  2. University of Antwerp
  3. applied biomedical research project of the Institute for the Promotion of Innovation by Science and Technology in Flanders [IWT-TBM 140191]
  4. Belgian Charcot Foundation
  5. A FACTT network (Cost Action) [BM1305]
  6. EU Framework Programme Horizon

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Migration of dendritic cells (DC) to the central nervous system (CNS) is a critical event in the pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis (MS). While up until now, research has mainly focused on the transmigration of DC through the blood-brain barrier, experimental evidence points out that also the choroid plexus and meningeal vessels represent important gateways to the CNS, especially in early disease stages. On the other hand, DC can exit the CNS to maintain immunological tolerance to patterns expressed in the CNS, a process that is perturbed in MS. Targeting trafficking of immune cells, including DC, to the CNS has demonstrated to be a successful strategy to treat MS. However, this approach is known to compromise protective immune surveillance of the brain. Unravelling the migratory paths of regulatory and pathogenic DC within the CNS may ultimately lead to the design of new therapeutic strategies able to selectively interfere with the recruitment of pathogenic DC to the CNS, while leaving host protective mechanisms intact.

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