4.7 Article

IFN-γ-dependent activation of the brain's choroid plexus for CNS immune surveillance and repair

Journal

BRAIN
Volume 136, Issue -, Pages 3427-3440

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/brain/awt259

Keywords

choroid plexus; blood-CSF barrier; CNS injury; trafficking; immune surveillance; IFN-gamma

Funding

  1. European Research Council (E.R.C.) [232835]
  2. EU [279017]

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Infiltrating T cells and monocyte-derived macrophages support central nervous system repair. Although infiltration of leucocytes to the injured central nervous system has recently been shown to be orchestrated by the brain's choroid plexus, the immunological mechanism that maintains this barrier and regulates its activity as a selective gate is poorly understood. Here, we hypothesized that CD4(+) effector memory T cells, recently shown to reside at the choroid plexus stroma, regulate leucocyte trafficking through this portal through their interactions with the choroid plexus epithelium. We found that the naive choroid plexus is populated by T helper 1, T helper 2 and regulatory T cells, but not by encephalitogenic T cells. In vitro findings revealed that the expression of immune cell trafficking determinants by the choroid plexus epithelium is specifically induced by interferon-gamma. Tumour necrosis factor-alpha and interferon-gamma reciprocally controlled the expression of their receptors by the choroid plexus epithelium, and had a synergistic effect in inducing the epithelial expression of trafficking molecules. In vivo, interferon-gamma-dependent signalling controlled trafficking through the choroid plexus; interferon-gamma receptor knockout mice exhibited reduced levels of T cells and monocyte entry to the cerebrospinal fluid and impaired recovery following spinal cord injury. Moreover, reduced expression of trafficking molecules by the choroid plexus was correlated with reduced CD4(+) T cells in the choroid plexus and cerebrospinal fluid of interferon-gamma receptor knockout mice. Similar effect on the expression of trafficking molecules by the choroid plexus was found in bone-marrow chimeric mice lacking interferon-gamma receptor in the central nervous system, or reciprocally, lacking interferon-gamma in the circulation. Collectively, our findings attribute a novel immunological plasticity to the choroid plexus epithelium, allowing it to serve, through interferon-gamma signalling, as a tightly regulated entry gate into the central nervous system for circulating leucocytes immune surveillance under physiological conditions, and for repair following acute injury.

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