Single-cell profiling of CNS border compartment leukocytes reveals that B cells and their progenitors reside in non-diseased meninges.
David SchafflickJolien WolbertMichael HemingChristian ThomasMaike HartlehnertAnna-Lena BörschAlessio RicciSandra Martín-SalamancaXiaolin LiI-Na LuMathias PawlakJens MinnerupJan-Kolja StreckerThomas SeidenbecherSven G MeuthAndrés HidalgoArthur LieszHeinz WiendlGerd Meyer Zu HörstePublished in: Nature neuroscience (2021)
The CNS is ensheathed by the meninges and cerebrospinal fluid, and recent findings suggest that these CNS-associated border tissues have complex immunological functions. Unlike myeloid lineage cells, lymphocytes in border compartments have yet to be thoroughly characterized. Based on single-cell transcriptomics, we here identified a highly location-specific composition and expression profile of tissue-resident leukocytes in CNS parenchyma, pia-enriched subdural meninges, dura mater, choroid plexus and cerebrospinal fluid. The dura layer of the meninges contained a large population of B cells under homeostatic conditions in mice and rats. Murine dura B cells exhibited slow turnover and long-term tissue residency, and they matured in experimental neuroinflammation. The dura also contained B lineage progenitors at the pro-B cell stage typically not found outside of bone marrow, without direct influx from the periphery or the skull bone marrow. This identified the dura as an unexpected site of B cell residence and potentially of development in both homeostasis and neuroinflammation.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- bone marrow
- cerebrospinal fluid
- rna seq
- blood brain barrier
- peripheral blood
- high throughput
- mesenchymal stem cells
- traumatic brain injury
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- induced apoptosis
- gene expression
- lps induced
- cell cycle arrest
- patient safety
- cell death
- type diabetes
- adipose tissue
- cell proliferation
- metabolic syndrome
- brain injury
- oxidative stress
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- medical students
- pi k akt