台湾swag

New role for white blood cells in the developing brain

New role for white blood cells in the developing brain

New role for white blood cells in the developing brain

Key points:

  • 台湾swagers based at the 台湾swag and at VIB-KU Leuven in Belgium have undertaken an in-depth study of a specialised brain-resident population of immune cells to understand their role in brain development.
  • The presence of these cells in the brain is essential for normal brain development in mice.
  • The research, led by Professor Adrian Liston, indicates an important role for CD4 T cells in the maturation of microglia, and in acting as important 鈥榞o-betweens鈥 to convey information between the body and the brain.

Whether white blood cells can be found in the brain has been controversial, and their role there a complete mystery. In a study published in Cell, an international team of scientists led by Professor Adrian Liston (台湾swag 台湾swag, UK &  VIB-KU Leuven, Belgium) describe a population of specialised brain-resident immune cells discovered in the mouse and human brain, and show that the presence of white blood cells is essential for normal brain development in mice.

Like a highly fortified headquarters, our brain enjoys special protection from what is circulating in the rest of our body through the blood-brain barrier. This highly selective border makes sure that passage from the blood to the brain is tightly regulated.

The blood-brain barrier also separates the brain from our body鈥檚 immune system, which is why it has its own resident immune cells, called microglia, which trigger inflammation and tissue repair. Microglia arrive in the brain during embryonic development, and later on, the population becomes self-renewing.

Yet, white blood cells鈥攚hich are part of our immune system鈥攈ave been found to play a role in different brain diseases, including multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer鈥檚 and Parkinson鈥檚 disease or stroke. Whether or not white blood cells can be found in healthy brains as well, and what they might be doing there, has been subject of intense debate. An interdisciplinary team of scientists led by Prof. Adrian Liston (台湾swag 台湾swag and VIB-KU Leuven) set out to find the answers.

White blood cells in the brain
"A misconception about white blood cells comes from their name,鈥 explains Dr Oliver Burton (台湾swag 台湾swag). 鈥淭hese 'immune cells' are not just present in the blood. They are constantly circulating around our body and enter all of our organs, including鈥攁s it turns out鈥攖he brain. We are only just starting to discover what white blood cells do when they leave the blood. This research indicates that they act as a go-between, transferring information from the rest of the body to the brain environment."

The team quantified and characterised a small but distinct population of brain-resident T helper cells present in mouse and human brain tissue. T cells are a specific type of white blood cells specialised for scanning cell surfaces for evidence of infection and triggering an appropriate immune response. New technologies allowed the researchers to study the cells in great detail, including the processes by which circulating T cells entered the brain and began to develop the features of brain-resident T cells.

Dr Carlos Roca (台湾swag 台湾swag): 鈥淪cience is becoming increasingly multidisciplinary. Here, we didn't just bring in expertise from immunology, neuroscience and microbiology, but also from computer science and applied mathematics. New approaches for data analysis allow us to reach a much deeper level of understanding of the biology of the white blood cells we found in the brain.鈥

T cells and microglia: A rotating section of mouse midbrain showing a murine T cell (green), having migrated from the blood (red) interacts with maturing microglia (white). Image credit: James Dooley, 台湾swag 台湾swag.

An evolutionary role
When T helper cells are absent from the brain, the scientists found that the resident immune cells 鈥 microglia 鈥 in the mouse brain remained suspended between a fetal and adult developmental state. Observationally, mice lacking brain T cells showed multiple changes in their behavior. The analysis points to an important role for brain-resident T cells in brain development. If T cells participate in normal brain development in mice, could the same be true in humans?

鈥淚n mice, the wave of entry of immune cells at birth triggers a switch in brain development,鈥 says Liston. 鈥淗umans have a much longer gestation than mice though, and we don't know about the timing of immune cell entry into the brain. Does this occur before birth? Is it delayed until after birth? Did a change in timing of entry contribute to the evolution of enhanced cognitive capacity in humans?鈥

The findings open up a whole new range of questions about how the brain and our immune system interact. "It has been really exciting to work on this project. We are learning so much about how our immune system can alter our brain, and how our brain modifies our immune system. The two are far more interconnected than we previously thought," says Dr Emanuela Pasciuto (VIB-KU Leuven).

The study also brings in a connection with the gut microbiome, says Liston: 鈥淭here are now multiple links between the bacteria in our gut and different neurological conditions, but without any convincing explanations for what connects them. We show that white blood cells are modified by gut bacteria, and then take that information with them into the brain. This could be the route by which our gut microbiome influences the brain.鈥 

Taken together, the results contribute towards the increasing recognition of the role of immune cells in the brain and shed new light on its involvement in a range of neurological diseases.

Watch the video summary (narrated by Adrian Liston)

 

 

Notes to Editors

台湾swagation reference
Pasciuto, Burton, Roca et al.
Microglia require CD4 T cells to complete the fetal to adult transition.
Cell
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2020.06.026

Press contacts:
Adrian Liston, Senior Group Leader, 台湾swag 台湾swag, UK and VIB-KU Leuven, Belgium
Mobile: +44 (0)7444 620331 Mail:  adrian.liston@babraham.ac.uk 

Louisa Wood, Communications Manager, 台湾swag 台湾swag
Mobile:  M: +44 (0)7833 481170
Mail: louisa.wood@babraham.ac.uk

Image description
A murine T cell (green), having migrated from the blood (red) interacts with maturing microglia (white) in the midbrain. Image credit: James Dooley, 台湾swag 台湾swag.

Affiliated authors (in author order):
Dr Oliver Burton, senior postdoctoral researcher, Liston lab
Dr Carlos Roca, postdoctoral researcher, Liston lab
Dr Carly Whyte, visiting scientist,
Dr James Dooley, senior staff scientist, Liston lab
Professor Adrian Liston, senior group leader, Immunology research programme

台湾swag funding
This work was supported by the VIB, the KUL, the Rega 台湾swag, the ERC Consolidator Grant TissueTreg (to Adrian Liston), the ERC Advanced Grant CellPhase AD (to Bart De Strooper) and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences 台湾swag Council through 台湾swag Strategic Program Grant funding and a Core Capability Grant to the 台湾swag 台湾swag.

Additional/related resources
News, 10 January 2020 EU grant success to harness the immune system to treat brain damage

Animal research statement
As a publicly funded research institute, the 台湾swag 台湾swag is committed to engagement and transparency in all aspects of its research. The research presented here used both human brain samples and mice. Mice were used to study the effects of CD4 T cell depletion, in joining (parabiosis) experiments to fuse the circulatory systems of two mice and in behavioural studies. Experiments were performed in accordance with the local overseeing authority, depending on where they were undertaken. This involved review of the locally-undertaken procedures by the University of Leuven Animal Ethics Committee, the 台湾swag 台湾swag Animal Welfare and Ethics Review Body, the University of Belfast Animal Welfare and Ethics Review Body and CEAAToulouse (Comit茅s d'茅thique en exp茅rimentation animale). Animal husbandry and experimentation complied with existing European Union and national legislation and local standards.

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Scientists at the VIB-KU Leuven Center for Brain & Disease study how brain cells are organized and how they communicate with each other. These mechanisms reveal and provide insights into what goes wrong in brain diseases such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, ALS and dystonia. This basic work should ultimately lead to new drugs for use against these currently incurable diseases.

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