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Toll-like receptors control the accumulation of neutrophils in lymph nodes that expand CD4 + T cells during experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis.

Ping ShenMadlen RotherUlrik StervboVicky LampropoulouElisabeth Calderon-GomezToralf RochEllen HilgenbergSteffi RiesAnja A KühlLuc JouneauPierre BoudinotSimon Fillatreau
Published in: European journal of immunology (2022)
Toll-like receptors (TLR) control the activation of dendritic cells that prime CD4 + T cells in draining lymph nodes, where these T cells then undergo massive clonal expansion. The mechanisms controlling this clonal T cell expansion are poorly defined. Using the CD4 + T cell-mediated disease experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), we show here that this process is markedly suppressed when TLR9 signaling is increased, without noticeably affecting the transcriptome of primed T cells, indicating a purely quantitative effect on CD4 + T cell expansion. Addressing the underpinning mechanisms revealed that CD4 + T cell expansion was preceded and depended on the accumulation of neutrophils in lymph nodes a few days after immunization. Underlying the importance of this immune regulation pathway, blocking neutrophil accumulation in lymph nodes by treating mice with a TLR9 agonist inhibited EAE progression in mice with defects in regulatory T cells or regulatory B cells, which otherwise developed a severe chronic disease. Collectively, this study demonstrates the key role of neutrophils in the quantitative regulation of antigen-specific CD4 + T cell expansion in lymph nodes, and the counter-regulatory role of TLR signaling in this process. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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