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result(s) for
"Thiriot, Aude"
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Specialized transendothelial dendritic cells mediate thymic T-cell selection against blood-borne macromolecules
2021
T cells undergo rigorous selection in the thymus to ensure self-tolerance and prevent autoimmunity, with this process requiring innocuous self-antigens (Ags) to be presented to thymocytes. Self-Ags are either expressed by thymic stroma cells or transported to the thymus from the periphery by migratory dendritic cells (DCs); meanwhile, small blood-borne peptides can access the thymic parenchyma by diffusing across the vascular lining. Here we describe an additional pathway of thymic Ag acquisition that enables circulating antigenic macromolecules to access both murine and human thymi. This pathway depends on a subset of thymus-resident DCs, distinct from both parenchymal and circulating migratory DCs, that are positioned in immediate proximity to thymic microvessels where they extend cellular processes across the endothelial barrier into the blood stream. Transendothelial positioning of DCs depends on DC-expressed CX
3
CR1 and its endothelial ligand, CX
3
CL1, and disrupting this chemokine pathway prevents thymic acquisition of circulating proteins and compromises negative selection of Ag-reactive thymocytes. Thus, transendothelial DCs represent a mechanism by which the thymus can actively acquire blood-borne Ags to induce and maintain central tolerance.
T cells are selected in the thymus, through interaction with self-antigens, to remove autoreactive cells. Here the authors show that a specialized thymic dendritic cell subset juxtaposes to microvessels, requires CX
3
CR1/CX
3
CL1 for this positioning, and has processes extruding into the blood stream to sample soluble macromolecules and assist in T cell selection.
Journal Article
Differential DARC/ACKR1 expression distinguishes venular from non-venular endothelial cells in murine tissues
by
Barreiro, Olga
,
Mazo, Irina
,
Thiriot, Aude
in
Animals
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Chemokines
2017
Background
Intravascular leukocyte recruitment in most vertebrate tissues is restricted to postcapillary and collecting venules, whereas capillaries and arterioles usually support little or no leukocyte adhesion. This segmental restriction is thought to be mediated by endothelial, rather than hemodynamic, differences. The underlying mechanisms are largely unknown, in part because effective tools to distinguish, isolate, and analyze venular endothelial cells (V-ECs) and non-venular endothelial cells (NV-ECs) have been unavailable. We hypothesized that the atypical chemokine receptor DARC (Duffy Antigen Receptor for Chemokines, a.k.a. ACKR1 or CD234) may distinguish V-ECs versus NV-ECs in mice.
Methods
We generated a rat-anti-mouse monoclonal antibody (MAb) that specifically recognizes the erythroid and endothelial forms of native, surface-expressed DARC. Using this reagent, we characterized DARC expression and distribution in the microvasculature of murine tissues.
Results
DARC was exquisitely restricted to post-capillary and small collecting venules and completely absent from arteries, arterioles, capillaries, veins, and most lymphatics in every tissue analyzed. Accordingly, intravital microscopy showed that adhesive leukocyte-endothelial interactions were restricted to DARC
+
venules. DARC was detectable over the entire circumference of V-ECs, but was more concentrated at cell-cell junctions. Analysis of single-cell suspensions suggested that the frequency of V-ECs among the total microvascular EC pool varies considerably between different tissues.
Conclusions
Immunostaining of endothelial DARC allows the identification and isolation of intact V-ECs from multiple murine tissues. This strategy may be useful to dissect the mechanisms underlying segmental microvascular specialization in healthy and diseased tissues and to characterize the role of EC subsets in tissue-homeostasis, immune surveillance, infection, inflammation, and malignancies.
Journal Article
Lung injury-induced activated endothelial cell states persist in aging-associated progressive fibrosis
2024
Progressive lung fibrosis is associated with poorly understood aging-related endothelial cell dysfunction. To gain insight into endothelial cell alterations in lung fibrosis we performed single cell RNA-sequencing of bleomycin-injured lungs from young and aged mice. Analysis reveals activated cell states enriched for hypoxia, glycolysis and YAP/TAZ activity in ACKR1+ venous and TrkB+ capillary endothelial cells. Endothelial cell activation is prevalent in lungs of aged mice and can also be detected in human fibrotic lungs. Longitudinal single cell RNA-sequencing combined with lineage tracing demonstrate that endothelial activation resolves in young mouse lungs but persists in aged ones, indicating a failure of the aged vasculature to return to quiescence. Genes associated with activated lung endothelial cells states in vivo can be induced in vitro by activating YAP/TAZ. YAP/TAZ also cooperate with BDNF, a TrkB ligand that is reduced in fibrotic lungs, to promote capillary morphogenesis. These findings offer insights into aging-related lung endothelial cell dysfunction that may contribute to defective lung injury repair and persistent fibrosis.
The regenerative capacity of the lung in response to injury deteriorates with aging. Here, Raslan et al. discover that aging-associated progressive lung fibrosis is accompanied by persistent activation of blood vessels. The authors identified the vascular YAP/TrkB axis as a putative driver of this process and potential therapeutic target.
Journal Article
Atypical chemokine receptor 1 on nucleated erythroid cells regulates hematopoiesis
2017
Genetic polymorphisms affect expression of the atypical chemokine receptor ACKR1 (Duffy) on nucleated erythrocyte precursors. Rot and colleagues show that loss of its expression alters hematopoiesis, yielding a distinct neutrophil population that rapidly exits the bloodstream to give an apparent ‘neutropenia’ phenotype.
Healthy individuals of African ancestry have neutropenia that has been linked with the variant rs2814778(G) of the gene encoding atypical chemokine receptor 1 (
ACKR1
). This polymorphism selectively abolishes the expression of ACKR1 in erythroid cells, causing a Duffy-negative phenotype. Here we describe an unexpected fundamental role for ACKR1 in hematopoiesis and provide the mechanism that links its absence with neutropenia. Nucleated erythroid cells had high expression of ACKR1, which facilitated their direct contact with hematopoietic stem cells. The absence of erythroid ACKR1 altered mouse hematopoiesis including stem and progenitor cells, which ultimately gave rise to phenotypically distinct neutrophils that readily left the circulation, causing neutropenia. Individuals with a Duffy-negative phenotype developed a distinct profile of neutrophil effector molecules that closely reflected the one observed in the ACKR1-deficient mice. Thus, alternative physiological patterns of hematopoiesis and bone marrow cell outputs depend on the expression of ACKR1 in the erythroid lineage, findings with major implications for the selection advantages that have resulted in the paramount fixation of the
ACKR1
rs2814778(G) polymorphism in Africa.
Journal Article
Conditions that promote transcellular neutrophil migration in vivo
2024
Circulating leukocytes enter tissue either through endothelial junctions (paracellular) or via a pore through the body of endothelial cells (transcellular). We have previously shown that genetically replacing VE-cadherin with a VE-cadherin-α-catenin (VEC-αC) fusion construct—which binds constitutively to actin—obstructs junctions, and blocks leukocyte extravasation in lung, skin and postcapillary venules of cremaster muscle. However, neutrophil recruitment into the inflamed peritoneal cavity was unimpaired. Investigating reasons for this, here, we visualized neutrophil diapedesis by 3D intravital video microscopy in the cremaster muscle and omentum, the major site of neutrophil recruitment into the peritoneal cavity. We found that 80% of neutrophil-extravasation occurred through HEVs in the omentum, which was unimpaired by VEC-αC. In addition, in larger venules (60–85 µm) of both tissues, less than 15% of neutrophils extravasated transcellularly in WT mice. However, in VEC-α-C mice, transcellular diapedesis increased severalfold in the omentum, but not in the cremaster. In line with this, omental venules expressed higher levels of ICAM-1 and atypical chemokine receptor 1. Furthermore, only in the omentum, VEC-αC expression caused reduced elongation of venular endothelium in flow-direction, suggesting different biomechanical properties. Collectively, VEC-αC does not inhibit paracellular transmigration in all types of venules and can modulate the diapedesis route.
Journal Article
Nociceptive sensory neurons drive interleukin-23-mediated psoriasiform skin inflammation
2014
In mice, it is possible to induce a psoriasis-like condition by applying imiquimod; here, the production of interleukin-23 that is stimulated by such skin inflammation is shown to depend on the interaction of nociceptors expressing the Na
v
1.8 and TRPV1 channels with skin-resident dendritic cells.
Peripheral neurons involved in inflammation
Repeated topical application of the antiviral immune modifier imiquimod (IMQ) to murine skin provokes interleukin-23-mediated inflammatory lesions that resemble human psoriasis. Ulrich von Andrian and colleagues show that the production of skin inflammation in this disease model depends on the interaction of a subset of sensory neurons expressing the ion channels TRPV1 and Na
v
1.8 with skin-resident dendritic cells. Taken together with other recent work, this finding suggests a scenario in which noxious pain fibres integrate environmental signals to modulate local immune responses to a variety of infectious and pro-inflammatory stimuli.
The skin has a dual function as a barrier and a sensory interface between the body and the environment. To protect against invading pathogens, the skin harbours specialized immune cells, including dermal dendritic cells (DDCs) and interleukin (IL)-17-producing γδ T (γδT17) cells, the aberrant activation of which by IL-23 can provoke psoriasis-like inflammation
1
,
2
,
3
,
4
. The skin is also innervated by a meshwork of peripheral nerves consisting of relatively sparse autonomic and abundant sensory fibres. Interactions between the autonomic nervous system and immune cells in lymphoid organs are known to contribute to systemic immunity, but how peripheral nerves regulate cutaneous immune responses remains unclear
5
,
6
. We exposed the skin of mice to imiquimod, which induces IL-23-dependent psoriasis-like inflammation
7
,
8
. Here we show that a subset of sensory neurons expressing the ion channels TRPV1 and Na
v
1.8 is essential to drive this inflammatory response. Imaging of intact skin revealed that a large fraction of DDCs, the principal source of IL-23, is in close contact with these nociceptors. Upon selective pharmacological or genetic ablation of nociceptors
9
,
10
,
11
, DDCs failed to produce IL-23 in imiquimod-exposed skin. Consequently, the local production of IL-23-dependent inflammatory cytokines by dermal γδT17 cells and the subsequent recruitment of inflammatory cells to the skin were markedly reduced. Intradermal injection of IL-23 bypassed the requirement for nociceptor communication with DDCs and restored the inflammatory response
12
. These findings indicate that TRPV1
+
Na
v
1.8
+
nociceptors, by interacting with DDCs, regulate the IL-23/IL-17 pathway and control cutaneous immune responses.
Journal Article
Spinal cord injury-induced immunodeficiency is mediated by a sympathetic-neuroendocrine adrenal reflex
2017
Spinal cord injury causes life-threatening infections. The authors report that this is partially mediated by a maladaptive neuroendocrine reflex, extending from the spinal cord to the adrenal glands, where it blocks catecholamines while producing immunosuppressive corticosteroids. The effect depends on the spinal injury level, and normalization of hormones production by the adrenals rescued mice from pneumonia.
Acute spinal cord injury (SCI) causes systemic immunosuppression and life-threatening infections, thought to result from noradrenergic overactivation and excess glucocorticoid release via hypothalamus–pituitary–adrenal axis stimulation. Instead of consecutive hypothalamus–pituitary–adrenal axis activation, we report that acute SCI in mice induced suppression of serum norepinephrine and concomitant increase in cortisol, despite suppressed adrenocorticotropic hormone, indicating primary (adrenal) hypercortisolism. This neurogenic effect was more pronounced after high-thoracic level (Th1) SCI disconnecting adrenal gland innervation, compared with low-thoracic level (Th9) SCI. Prophylactic adrenalectomy completely prevented SCI-induced glucocorticoid excess and lymphocyte depletion but did not prevent pneumonia. When adrenalectomized mice were transplanted with denervated adrenal glands to restore physiologic glucocorticoid levels, the animals were completely protected from pneumonia. These findings identify a maladaptive sympathetic-neuroendocrine adrenal reflex mediating immunosuppression after SCI, implying that therapeutic normalization of the glucocorticoid and catecholamine imbalance in SCI patients could be a strategy to prevent detrimental infections.
Journal Article
Slow integrin-dependent migration organizes networks of tissue-resident mast cells
2023
Immune cell locomotion is associated with amoeboid migration, a flexible mode of movement, which depends on rapid cycles of actin polymerization and actomyosin contraction
1
. Many immune cells do not necessarily require integrins, the major family of adhesion receptors in mammals, to move productively through three-dimensional tissue spaces
2
,
3
. Instead, they can use alternative strategies to transmit their actin-driven forces to the substrate, explaining their migratory adaptation to changing external environments
4
–
6
. However, whether these generalized concepts apply to all immune cells is unclear. Here, we show that the movement of mast cells (immune cells with important roles during allergy and anaphylaxis) differs fundamentally from the widely applied paradigm of interstitial immune cell migration. We identify a crucial role for integrin-dependent adhesion in controlling mast cell movement and localization to anatomical niches rich in KIT ligand, the major mast cell growth and survival factor. Our findings show that substrate-dependent haptokinesis is an important mechanism for the tissue organization of resident immune cells.
Immune cells are generally considered to be able to move through tissues using nonadhesive amoeboid migration mechanics. Here, the authors show that, unlike other immune cells, mast cells do not use this method and instead are completely reliant on integrin–ECM interactions.
Journal Article
In vivo endothelial siRNA delivery using polymeric nanoparticles with low molecular weight
by
Danino, Dganit
,
Abezgauz, Ludmila
,
Jhunjunwala, Siddharth
in
631/61/350/354
,
639/925/352/152
,
Animals
2014
Dysfunctional endothelium contributes to more diseases than any other tissue in the body. Small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) can help in the study and treatment of endothelial cells
in vivo
by durably silencing multiple genes simultaneously, but efficient siRNA delivery has so far remained challenging. Here, we show that polymeric nanoparticles made of low-molecular-weight polyamines and lipids can deliver siRNA to endothelial cells with high efficiency, thereby facilitating the simultaneous silencing of multiple endothelial genes
in vivo
. Unlike lipid or lipid-like nanoparticles, this formulation does not significantly reduce gene expression in hepatocytes or immune cells even at the dosage necessary for endothelial gene silencing. These nanoparticles mediate the most durable non-liver silencing reported so far and facilitate the delivery of siRNAs that modify endothelial function in mouse models of vascular permeability, emphysema, primary tumour growth and metastasis.
Polymeric nanoparticles can efficiently deliver siRNAs to endothelial cells
in vivo
and silence multiple genes for weeks.
Journal Article