RORγt-Expressing Pathogenic CD4+T Cells Cause Brain Inflammation During Chronic Colitis

2021 
Neurobehavioral disorders and brain abnormalities have been extensively reported in both Crohns Disease (CD) and Ulcerative Colitis (UC) patients. However, the mechanism causing neuropathological disorders in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients remains unknown. Studies have linked the Th17 subset of CD4+T cells to brain diseases associated with neuroinflammation and cognitive impairment, including multiple sclerosis (MS), ischemic brain injury and Alzheimers disease. To better understand how CD4+T lymphocytes, contribute to brain pathology in chronic intestinal inflammation, we investigated the development of brain inflammation in the T cell transfer model of chronic colitis. Our findings demonstrate that CD4+T cells infiltrate the brain of colitic Rag1-/- mice in proportional levels to colitis severity. Colitic mice developed hypothalamic astrogliosis that correlated with neurobehavioral disorders. Moreover, the brain-infiltrating CD4+T cells expressed Th17 cell transcription factor ROR{gamma}t and displayed a pathogenic Th17 cellular phenotype similar to colonic Th17 cells. Adoptive transfer of ROR{gamma}t-deficient naive CD4+T cells failed to cause brain inflammation and neurobehavioral disorders in Rag1-/- recipients, with significantly less brain infiltration of CD4+T cells. These findings suggest that pathogenic ROR{gamma}t+CD4+T cells that aggravate colitis migrate preferentially into the brain, contributing to brain inflammation and neurobehavioral disorders, thereby linking colitis severity to neuroinflammation.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    62
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []