Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Brain-infiltrating CD4 T cells drive inflammatory microglia proliferation during cryptococcal meningitis in mice.
- Journal:
- Nature communications
- Year:
- 2025
- Authors:
- Hain, Sofia et al.
- Affiliation:
- Institute of Immunology & Immunotherapy · United Kingdom
- Species:
- rodent
Abstract
Cryptococcal meningitis is a fungal infection in patients with compromised CD4 T cell function. CD4 T cells provide killing signals to macrophages, principally IFNγ, to limit intracellular fungal replication. However, CD4 T cells may also drive inflammatory tissue damage. Yet, it is not fully understood how fungal-specific CD4 T cells infiltrate the brain and how they influence functional phenotypes of CNS-resident myeloid cells. In the current work, we develop a mouse model to track fungal-specific CD4 T cells and determine their influence on microglia. We found IFNγ+ fungal-specific CD4 T cells have limited TCR signalling and characterise a population of inflammatory microglia that upregulate MHCII and IFNγ-regulated genes during infection. Inflammatory microglia have poor fungicidal capacity and significantly expand during infection, a process that depends on CD4 T cell infiltration. Taken together, these data identify the early inflammatory consequences of fungal-specific CD4 T cell infiltration and identify proliferating microglia as important drivers of brain inflammation during infection.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41068074/