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Loss of vascular endothelial notch signaling promotes spontaneous formation of tertiary lymphoid structures.

Susanne V FleigTamar KapanadzeJeremiah Bernier-LatmaniJulia K LillTania Wyss LozanoJaba GamrekelashviliDustin KijasBin LiuAnne M HüsingEsther BovayAdan Chari JirmoStephan HalleMelanie Ricke-HochRalf H AdamsDaniel Robert EngelSibylle von VietinghoffReinhold FörsterDenise Hilfiker-KleinerHermann HallerTatiana V PetrovaSusanne V Fleig
Published in: Nature communications (2022)
Tertiary lymphoid structures (TLS) are lymph node-like immune cell clusters that emerge during chronic inflammation in non-lymphoid organs like the kidney, but their origin remains not well understood. Here we show, using conditional deletion strategies of the canonical Notch signaling mediator Rbpj, that loss of endothelial Notch signaling in adult mice induces the spontaneous formation of bona fide TLS in the kidney, liver and lung, based on molecular, cellular and structural criteria. These TLS form in a stereotypical manner around parenchymal arteries, while secondary lymphoid structures remained largely unchanged. This effect is mediated by endothelium of blood vessels, but not lymphatics, since a lymphatic endothelial-specific targeting strategy did not result in TLS formation, and involves loss of arterial specification and concomitant acquisition of a high endothelial cell phenotype, as shown by transcriptional analysis of kidney endothelial cells. This indicates a so far unrecognized role for vascular endothelial cells and Notch signaling in TLS initiation.
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