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© Research
Publication : European journal of immunology

Lymphotoxins from distinct types of lymphoid cells differentially contribute to neuroinflammation.

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in European journal of immunology - 01 Nov 2024

Gogoleva VS, Drutskaya MS, Vorontsov AI, Atretkhany KN, Belogurov AA, Kruglov AA, Nedospasov SA

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 39210647

Link to DOI – 10.1002/eji.202350977

Eur J Immunol 2024 Nov; 54(11): e2350977

Lymphotoxin α and lymphotoxin β (LTs), TNF superfamily members, are expressed in either soluble (LTα3) or membrane-bound (LTα1β2 or LTα2β1) forms. In the pathological context, LT-mediated signaling is known to exacerbate autoimmunity by perpetuating inflammation and promoting the formation of tertiary lymphoid organs. Despite this understanding, the exact roles of LTα and LTβ in the pathogenesis of the murine model of multiple sclerosis, and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), remain controversial. Here, we employed a panel of gene-modified mice with cell-type restricted ablation of LTα (targeting both membrane-bound and soluble forms of LTs) to unravel the contributions of LTs from various lymphoid cells, namely T cells, type 3 innate lymphoid cells (ILC3) and B cells, in EAE. We found that the effects of LTα deletion were dependent on the cellular source. ILC3-derived lymphotoxins exerted a protective role in EAE by regulating the accumulation of IFN-ɣ- and GM-CSF-producing TH cells in the CNS. In contrast, T-cell-derived lymphotoxins promoted IL-17A- and GM-CSF-mediated TH responses in the periphery, whereas B-cell-derived lymphotoxins were pathogenic only in the autoantibody-mediated EAE model. Collectively, our findings unveil the multifaceted involvement of lymphotoxins in EAE pathogenesis and challenge the view that lymphotoxins play a solely pathogenic role in neuroinflammation.