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Cerebrospinal fluid can exit into the skull bone marrow and instruct cranial hematopoiesis in mice with bacterial meningitis

Authors :
Fadi E. Pulous
Jean C. Cruz-Hernández
Chongbo Yang
Ζeynep Kaya
Alexandre Paccalet
Gregory Wojtkiewicz
Diane Capen
Dennis Brown
Juwell W. Wu
Maximilian J. Schloss
Claudio Vinegoni
Dmitry Richter
Masahiro Yamazoe
Maarten Hulsmans
Noor Momin
Jana Grune
David Rohde
Cameron S. McAlpine
Peter Panizzi
Ralph Weissleder
Dong-Eog Kim
Filip K. Swirski
Charles P. Lin
Michael A. Moskowitz
Matthias Nahrendorf
Source :
Nature Neuroscience. 25:567-576
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Interactions between the immune and central nervous systems strongly influence brain health. Although the blood-brain barrier restricts this crosstalk, we now know that meningeal gateways through brain border tissues facilitate intersystem communication. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), which interfaces with the glymphatic system and thereby drains the brain's interstitial and perivascular spaces, facilitates outward signaling beyond the blood-brain barrier. In the present study, we report that CSF can exit into the skull bone marrow. Fluorescent tracers injected into the cisterna magna of mice migrate along perivascular spaces of dural blood vessels and then travel through hundreds of sub-millimeter skull channels into the calvarial marrow. During meningitis, bacteria hijack this route to invade the skull's hematopoietic niches and initiate cranial hematopoiesis ahead of remote tibial sites. As skull channels also directly provide leukocytes to meninges, the privileged sampling of brain-derived danger signals in CSF by regional marrow may have broad implications for inflammatory neurological disorders.

Details

ISSN :
15461726 and 10976256
Volume :
25
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Neuroscience
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9743e5fc1753ccf1fd3def32e16ad6a8