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T-cell surveillance of the human brain in health and multiple sclerosis

Joost Smolders, Marvin M. van Luijn, Cheng‐Chih Hsiao, Jörg Hamann

2022Seminars in Immunopathology28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Circulating and tissue-resident T cells collaborate in the protection of tissues against harmful infections and malignant transformation but also can instigate autoimmune reactions. Similar roles for T cells in the brain have been less evident due to the compartmentized organization of the central nervous system (CNS). In recent years, beneficial as well as occasional, detrimental effects of T-cell-targeting drugs in people with early multiple sclerosis (MS) have increased interest in T cells patrolling the CNS. Next to studies focusing on T cells in the cerebrospinal fluid, phenotypic characteristics of T cells located in the perivascular space and the meninges as well as in the parenchyma in MS lesions have been reported. We here summarize the current knowledge about T cells infiltrating the healthy and MS brain and argue that understanding the dynamics of physiological CNS surveillance by T cells is likely to improve the understanding of pathological conditions, such as MS.

Topics & Concepts

Multiple sclerosisParenchymaCentral nervous systemCerebrospinal fluidImmunologyMeningesPathologicalPathologyMedicineBiologyNeuroscienceMultiple Sclerosis Research StudiesNeuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration MechanismsT-cell and B-cell Immunology
T-cell surveillance of the human brain in health and multiple sclerosis | Litcius