免疫学
免疫系统
微生物群
自身免疫性疾病
自身免疫
神经炎症
生物
实验性自身免疫性脑脊髓炎
脂多糖
小胶质细胞
医学
炎症
生物信息学
抗体
作者
Leon Hosang,Roger Cugota Canals,Felicia Joy van der Flier,Jacqueline Hollensteiner,Rolf Daniel,Alexander Flügel,Francesca Odoardi
出处
期刊:Nature
[Nature Portfolio]
日期:2022-02-23
卷期号:603 (7899): 138-144
被引量:163
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41586-022-04427-4
摘要
Lung infections and smoking are risk factors for multiple sclerosis, a T-cell-mediated autoimmune disease of the central nervous system1. In addition, the lung serves as a niche for the disease-inducing T cells for long-term survival and for maturation into migration-competent effector T cells2. Why the lung tissue in particular has such an important role in an autoimmune disease of the brain is not yet known. Here we detected a tight interconnection between the lung microbiota and the immune reactivity of the brain. A dysregulation in the lung microbiome significantly influenced the susceptibility of rats to developing autoimmune disease of the central nervous system. Shifting the microbiota towards lipopolysaccharide-enriched phyla by local treatment with neomycin induced a type-I-interferon-primed state in brain-resident microglial cells. Their responsiveness towards autoimmune-dominated stimulation by type II interferons was impaired, which led to decreased proinflammatory response, immune cell recruitment and clinical signs. Suppressing lipopolysaccharide-producing lung phyla with polymyxin B led to disease aggravation, whereas addition of lipopolysaccharide-enriched phyla or lipopolysaccharide recapitulated the neomycin effect. Our data demonstrate the existence of a lung-brain axis in which the pulmonary microbiome regulates the immune reactivity of the central nervous tissue and thereby influences its susceptibility to autoimmune disease development.
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