Vulnerability of human neurons to T cell-mediated cytotoxicity

F Giuliani, CG Goodyer, JP Antel… - The Journal of …, 2003 - journals.aai.org
The Journal of Immunology, 2003journals.aai.org
Axonal and neuronal loss occurs in inflammatory diseases of the CNS such as multiple
sclerosis. The cause of the loss remains unclear. We report that polyclonally activated T cells
align along axons and soma of cultured human neurons leading to substantial neuronal
death. This occurs in an allogeneic and syngeneic manner in the absence of added Ag,
requires T cells to be activated, and is mediated through cell contact-dependent
mechanisms involving FasL, LFA-1, and CD40 but not MHC class I. Activated CD4+ and …
Abstract
Axonal and neuronal loss occurs in inflammatory diseases of the CNS such as multiple sclerosis. The cause of the loss remains unclear. We report that polyclonally activated T cells align along axons and soma of cultured human neurons leading to substantial neuronal death. This occurs in an allogeneic and syngeneic manner in the absence of added Ag, requires T cells to be activated, and is mediated through cell contact-dependent mechanisms involving FasL, LFA-1, and CD40 but not MHC class I. Activated CD4+ and CD8+ T cell subsets are equally neuronal cytotoxic. In contrast to neurons, other CNS cell types (oligodendrocytes and astrocytes) are not killed by T cells. These results demonstrate for the first time the high and selective vulnerability of human neurons to T cells, and suggest that when enough activated T cells accumulate in the CNS, neuronal cytotoxicity can result through Ag-independent non-MHC class I mechanisms.
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