Intrinsic antiviral immunity of barrier cells revealed by an iPSC-derived blood-brain barrier cellular model
Physiological blood-tissue barriers play a critical role in separating the circulation from immune-privileged sites and denying access to blood-borne viruses. The mechanism of virus restriction by these barriers is poorly understood. We utilize induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived human brai...
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Published in | Cell reports (Cambridge) Vol. 39; no. 9; p. 110885 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
United States
Elsevier Inc
31.05.2022
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Physiological blood-tissue barriers play a critical role in separating the circulation from immune-privileged sites and denying access to blood-borne viruses. The mechanism of virus restriction by these barriers is poorly understood. We utilize induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived human brain microvascular endothelial cells (iBMECs) to study virus-blood-brain barrier (BBB) interactions. These iPSC-derived cells faithfully recapitulate a striking difference in in vivo neuroinvasion by two alphavirus isolates and are selectively permissive to neurotropic flaviviruses. A model of cocultured iBMECs and astrocytes exhibits high transendothelial electrical resistance and blocks non-neurotropic flaviviruses from getting across the barrier. We find that iBMECs constitutively express an interferon-induced gene, IFITM1, which preferentially restricts the replication of non-neurotropic flaviviruses. Barrier cells from blood-testis and blood-retinal barriers also constitutively express IFITMs that contribute to the viral resistance. Our application of a renewable human iPSC-based model for studying virus-BBB interactions reveals that intrinsic immunity at the barriers contributes to virus exclusion.
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•iPSC-derived BBB cells recapitulate the in vivo phenotype of neuroinvasive viruses•An iBMEC/astrocyte coculture exhibits high TEER and models viral neuroinvasion•Constitutive expression of IFITM1 selectively inhibits non-neurotropic flaviviruses•Intrinsic expression of IFITMs contributes to broad barrier-based virus restriction
Using a stem cell-derived cellular model and a panel of human pathogenic viruses, Cheng et al. show a mechanism by which some viruses can penetrate the blood-brain barrier and cause diseases in the central nervous system. |
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Bibliography: | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS Conception and design, H.T., Y.C., A.M., M.M.H.L., and J.L.; performing experiments and collection of data, Y.C., A.M., Z.Y., M.B., M.A.B., J.L., J.P.N., E.S., M.B.N., and M.K.; contribution of reagents, C.X., X.Q., P.T.T.N., Z.W., H.S., G.-L.M., M.A.B., and M.K.; analysis and interpretation of data, H.T., Y.C., A.M., M.M.H.L., M.A.B., and M.K.; manuscript writing, H.T., Y.C., and A.M. wrote the initial draft of the paper; M.M.H.L., M.A.B., Z.Y., and M.K. provided edits; all authors read the manuscript. |
ISSN: | 2211-1247 2211-1247 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.celrep.2022.110885 |