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Neuroprotection against ischemic stroke requires a specific class of early responder T cells in mice

Authors :
Wei Cai
Ligen Shi
Jingyan Zhao
Fei Xu
Connor Dufort
Qing Ye
Tuo Yang
Xuejiao Dai
Junxuan Lyu
Chenghao Jin
Hongjian Pu
Fang Yu
Sulaiman Hassan
Zeyu Sun
Wenting Zhang
T. Kevin Hitchens
Yejie Shi
Angus W. Thomson
Rehana K. Leak
Xiaoming Hu
Jun Chen
Source :
The Journal of clinical investigation. 132(15)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Immunomodulation holds therapeutic promise against brain injuries, but leveraging this approach requires a precise understanding of mechanisms. We report that CD8+CD122+CD49dlo T regulatory-like cells (CD8+ TRLs) are among the earliest lymphocytes to infiltrate mouse brains after ischemic stroke and temper inflammation; they also confer neuroprotection. TRL depletion worsened stroke outcomes, an effect reversed by CD8+ TRL reconstitution. The CXCR3/CXCL10 axis served as the brain-homing mechanism for CD8+ TRLs. Upon brain entry, CD8+ TRLs were reprogrammed to upregulate leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) receptor, epidermal growth factor-like transforming growth factor (ETGF), and interleukin 10 (IL-10). LIF/LIF receptor interactions induced ETGF and IL-10 production in CD8+ TRLs. While IL-10 induction was important for the antiinflammatory effects of CD8+ TRLs, ETGF provided direct neuroprotection. Poststroke intravenous transfer of CD8+ TRLs reduced infarction, promoting long-term neurological recovery in young males or aged mice of both sexes. Thus, these unique CD8+ TRLs serve as early responders to rally defenses against stroke, offering fresh perspectives for clinical translation.

Details

ISSN :
15588238
Volume :
132
Issue :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of clinical investigation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8c17e71c71672c7d4b21af8c1ec1d088