Neurotropic viral infections induce priming and maintenance of a novel antigen-specific CD8 T cell population within the bone marrow that dysregulates the stem cell niche upon reactivation
Presentation Time: 08:30 AM - 08:45 AM
Abstract ID: 5932 - B
Presenting Author:
Rachael A Reesman
Abstract:
Bone marrow (BM) is the primary immune organ responsible for stem cell maintenance. Neurotropic infections elicit sequestration of T cells within the BM. Changes of the BM niche during brain viral infections are unknown. Intracranial infection with the neurotropic Theiler’s Murine Encephalomyelitis Virus (TMEV) in C57BL/6 mouse is cleared by 30 days due to generation of an antigen-specific CD8 T cell response. We determined that 1-10% of CD8 T cells present in the sternal, femoral, and cranial BM were virus antigen-specific 7 days post intracranial infection. Over 70% of these CD8 T cells were tissue resident. We determined antigen-specific CD8 T cells were generated in the BM within 4 days of infection, a timeline similar to lymph nodes. Continuous treatment with FTY720, which sequesters T cells outside of the blood, did not eliminate antigen-specific CD8 T cells in any BM compartment. CD8 T cells in the BM established durable memory populations and were reactivated upon antigen reencounter. Both acute infection and reactivation caused an increase in lineage-, Sca-1+, ckit+ (LSK) cells in the BM. This LSK dysregulation was abrogated upon CD8 T cell depletion and was limited to the intracranial routes of infection. We conclude that brain viral infections induce in situ effector and memory T cell responses within the BM and cause stem cell dysregulation. Our data paves the way for crucial studies of BM resident antigen-specific CD8 T cells in health and disease.
Neurotropic viral infections induce priming and maintenance of a novel antigen-specific CD8 T cell population within the bone marrow that dysregulates the stem cell niche upon reactivation
Category
Poster and Podium (Block Symposium)