학술논문

Olfactory sensory neurons mediate ultrarapid antiviral immune responses in a TrkA-dependent manner.
Document Type
Article
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 6/18/2019, Vol. 116 Issue 25, p12428-12436. 9p.
Subject
*IMMUNE response
*VIRAL proteins
*NERVOUS system
*VIRAL antibodies
*G proteins
Language
ISSN
0027-8424
Abstract
The nervous system regulates host immunity in complex ways. Vertebrate olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs) are located in direct contact with pathogens; however, OSNs' ability to detect danger and initiate immune responses is unclear. We report that nasal delivery of rhabdoviruses induces apoptosis in crypt OSNs via the interaction of the OSN TrkA receptor with the viral glycoprotein in teleost fish. This signal results in electrical activation of neurons and very rapid proinflammatory responses in the olfactory organ (OO), but dampened inflammation in the olfactory bulb (OB). CD8a+ cells infiltrate the OO within minutes of nasal viral delivery, and TrkA blocking, but not caspase-3 blocking, abrogates this response. Infiltrating CD8a+ cells were TCRaβ T cells with a nonconventional phenotype that originated from the microvasculature surrounding the OB and not the periphery. Nasal delivery of viral glycoprotein (G protein) recapitulated the immune responses observed with the whole virus, and antibody blocking of viral G protein abrogated these responses. Ablation of crypt neurons in zebrafish resulted in increased susceptibility to rhabdoviruses. These results indicate a function for OSNs as a first layer of pathogen detection in vertebrates and as orchestrators of nasal-CNS antiviral immune responses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]