The blood-brain barrier induces differentiation of migrating monocytes into Th17-polarizing dendritic cells

Ilan Ifergan(Hôpital Notre-Dame), Hania Kébir(Hôpital Notre-Dame), Monique Bernard(Hôpital Notre-Dame), Karolina Wosik(Hôpital Notre-Dame), Aurore Dodelet-Devillers(Hôpital Notre-Dame), Romain Cayrol(Hôpital Notre-Dame), Nathalie Arbour(Hôpital Notre-Dame), Alexandre Prat(Hôpital Notre-Dame)
Brain
December 21, 2007
Cited by 197Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Trafficking of antigen-presenting cells into the CNS is essential for lymphocyte reactivation within the CNS compartment. Although perivascular dendritic cells found in inflammatory lesions are reported to polarize naive CD4+ T lymphocytes into interleukin-17-secreting-cells, the origin of those antigen-presenting cells remains controversial. We demonstrate that a subset of CD14+ monocytes migrate across the inflamed human blood-brain barrier (BBB) and differentiate into CD83+CD209+ dendritic cells under the influence of BBB-secreted transforming growth factor-beta and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor. We also demonstrate that these dendritic cells secrete interleukin-12p70, transforming growth factor-beta and interleukin-6 and promote the proliferation and expansion of distinct populations of interferon-gamma-secreting Th1 and interleukin-17-secreting Th17 CD4+ T lymphocytes. We further confirmed the abundance of such dendritic cells in situ, closely associated with microvascular BBB-endothelial cells within acute multiple sclerosis lesions, as well as a significant number of CD4+ interleukin-17+ T lymphocytes in the perivascular infiltrate. Our data support the notion that functional perivascular myeloid CNS dendritic cells arise as a consequence of migration of CD14+ monocytes across the human BBB, through the concerted actions of BBB-secreted transforming growth factor-beta and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis