Lymphotoxin-alpha expression in the meninges causes lymphoid tissue formation and neurodegeneration.
Rachel E James BatesEleanor BrowneRenee SchalksHeather JacobsLi TanPuja ParekhRoberta MagliozziMassimiliano CalabreseNicholas D MazarakisRichard ReynoldsPublished in: Brain : a journal of neurology (2022)
Organised meningeal immune cell infiltrates are suggested to play an important role in cortical grey matter pathology in the multiple sclerosis brain, but the mechanisms involved are as yet unresolved. Lymphotoxin-alpha plays a key role in lymphoid organ development and cellular cytotoxicity in the immune system and its expression is increased in the cerebrospinal fluid of naïve and progressive multiple sclerosis patients and post-mortem meningeal tissue. Here we show that persistently increased levels of lymphotoxin alpha in the cerebral meninges can give rise to lymphoid-like structures and underlying multiple sclerosis-like cortical pathology. Stereotaxic injections of recombinant lymphotoxin-alpha into the rat meninges led to acute meningeal inflammation and subpial demyelination that resolved after 28 days, with demyelination being dependent on prior sub-clinical immunisation with myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein. Injection of a lymphotoxin-alpha lentiviral vector into the cortical meningeal space, to produce chronic localised over-expression of the cytokine, induced extensive lymphoid-like immune cell aggregates, maintained over 3 months, including T-cell rich zones containing podoplanin+ fibroblastic reticular stromal cells and B-cell rich zones with a network of follicular dendritic cells, together with expression of lymphoid chemokines and their receptors. Extensive microglial and astroglial activation, subpial demyelination and marked neuronal loss occurred in the underlying cortical parenchyma. Whereas subpial demyelination was partially dependent on prior myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein immunisation, the neuronal loss was present irrespective of immunisation. Conditioned medium from LTα treated microglia was able to induce a reactive phenotype in astrocytes. Our results show that chronic lymphotoxin-alpha overexpression alone is sufficient to induce formation of meningeal lymphoid-like structures and subsequent neurodegeneration, similar to that seen in the progressive multiple sclerosis brain.
Keyphrases
- multiple sclerosis
- white matter
- poor prognosis
- dendritic cells
- binding protein
- cerebral ischemia
- drug induced
- inflammatory response
- ejection fraction
- immune response
- neuropathic pain
- transcription factor
- long non coding rna
- end stage renal disease
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- liver failure
- prognostic factors
- cell proliferation
- hepatitis b virus
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- intensive care unit
- aortic dissection
- diabetic rats
- platelet rich plasma
- patient reported
- cell free
- cerebral blood flow