Cerebrospinal fluid regulates skull bone marrow niches via direct access through dural channels.
Jose Mazzitelli PerezLeon C D SmythKevin A CrossTaitea DykstraJerry SunSiling DuTornike MamuladzeIgor SmirnovJustin RustenhovenJonathan KipnisPublished in: Nature neuroscience (2022)
It remains unclear how immune cells from skull bone marrow niches are recruited to the meninges. Here we report that cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) accesses skull bone marrow via dura-skull channels, and CSF proteins signal onto diverse cell types within the niches. After spinal cord injury, CSF-borne cues promote myelopoiesis and egress of myeloid cells into meninges. This reveals a mechanism of CNS-to-bone-marrow communication via CSF that regulates CNS immune responses.