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Influence of circadian clocks on adaptive immunity and vaccination responses.

Louise Madeleine InceColine BarnoudLydia Kay LutesRobert PickChen WangFlore SinturelChien-Sin ChenAlba de JuanJasmin WeberStephan J HoltkampSophia Martina HergenhanJennifer Geddes-McAlisterStefan EbnerPaola FontannazBenjamin MeyerMaria VonoStéphane JemelinCharna DibnerClaire-Anne SiegristRüdiger KleinFrederik GrawChristoph Scheiermann
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
The adaptive immune response is under circadian control, yet, why adaptive immune reactions continue to exhibit circadian changes over long periods of time is unknown. Using a combination of experimental and mathematical modeling approaches, we show here that dendritic cells migrate from the skin to the draining lymph node in a time-of-day-dependent manner, which provides an enhanced likelihood for functional interactions with T cells. Rhythmic expression of TNF in the draining lymph node enhances BMAL1-controlled ICAM-1 expression in high endothelial venules, resulting in lymphocyte infiltration and lymph node expansion. Lymph node cellularity continues to be different for weeks after the initial time-of-day-dependent challenge, which governs the immune response to vaccinations directed against Hepatitis A virus as well as SARS-CoV-2. In this work, we present a mechanistic understanding of the time-of-day dependent development and maintenance of an adaptive immune response, providing a strategy for using time-of-day to optimize vaccination regimes.
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