Positioning of follicular dendritic cells within the spleen controls prion neuroinvasion

M Prinz, M Heikenwalder, T Junt, P Schwarz, M Glatzel… - Nature, 2003 - nature.com
Nature, 2003nature.com
Peripheral infection is the natural route of transmission in most prion diseases. Peripheral
prion infection is followed by rapid prion replication in lymphoid organs, neuroinvasion and
progressive neurological disease. Both immune cells and nerves are involved in
pathogenesis,, but the mechanisms of prion transfer from the immune to the nervous system
are unknown. Here we show that ablation of the chemokine receptor CXCR5 juxtaposes
follicular dendritic cells (FDCs) to major splenic nerves, and accelerates the transfer of …
Abstract
Peripheral infection is the natural route of transmission in most prion diseases. Peripheral prion infection is followed by rapid prion replication in lymphoid organs, neuroinvasion and progressive neurological disease. Both immune cells and nerves are involved in pathogenesis,, but the mechanisms of prion transfer from the immune to the nervous system are unknown. Here we show that ablation of the chemokine receptor CXCR5 juxtaposes follicular dendritic cells (FDCs) to major splenic nerves, and accelerates the transfer of intraperitoneally administered prions into the spinal cord. Neuroinvasion velocity correlated exclusively with the relative locations of FDCs and nerves: transfer of CXCR5-/- bone marrow to wild-type mice induced perineural FDCs and enhanced neuroinvasion, whereas reciprocal transfer to CXCR5-/- mice abolished them and restored normal efficiency of neuroinvasion. Suppression of lymphotoxin signalling depleted FDCs, abolished splenic infectivity, and suppressed acceleration of pathogenesis in CXCR5-/- mice. This suggests that prion neuroimmune transition occurs between FDCs and sympathetic nerves, and relative positioning of FDCs and nerves controls the efficiency of peripheral prion infection.
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