Login / Signup

Bacteria hijack a meningeal neuroimmune axis to facilitate brain invasion.

Felipe A Pinho-RibeiroLiwen DengDylan V NeelOzge ErdoganHimanish BasuDaping YangSamantha ChoiAlec J WalkerSimone Carneiro-NascimentoKathleen HeGlendon WuBeth StevensKelly S DoranDan LevyIsaac M Chiu
Published in: Nature (2023)
The meninges are densely innervated by nociceptive sensory neurons that mediate pain and headache 1,2 . Bacterial meningitis causes life-threatening infections of the meninges and central nervous system, affecting more than 2.5 million people a year 3-5 . How pain and neuroimmune interactions impact meningeal antibacterial host defences are unclear. Here we show that Nav1.8 + nociceptors signal to immune cells in the meninges through the neuropeptide calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) during infection. This neuroimmune axis inhibits host defences and exacerbates bacterial meningitis. Nociceptor neuron ablation reduced meningeal and brain invasion by two bacterial pathogens: Streptococcus pneumoniae and Streptococcus agalactiae. S. pneumoniae activated nociceptors through its pore-forming toxin pneumolysin to release CGRP from nerve terminals. CGRP acted through receptor activity modifying protein 1 (RAMP1) on meningeal macrophages to polarize their transcriptional responses, suppressing macrophage chemokine expression, neutrophil recruitment and dural antimicrobial defences. Macrophage-specific RAMP1 deficiency or pharmacological blockade of RAMP1 enhanced immune responses and bacterial clearance in the meninges and brain. Therefore, bacteria hijack CGRP-RAMP1 signalling in meningeal macrophages to facilitate brain invasion. Targeting this neuroimmune axis in the meninges can enhance host defences and potentially produce treatments for bacterial meningitis.
Keyphrases