Author
Listed:
- Tomomi M. Yoshida
(Yale School of Medicine
Yale School of Medicine
Yale School of Medicine)
- Mytien Nguyen
(Yale School of Medicine)
- Le Zhang
(Yale School of Medicine
Yale School of Medicine)
- Benjamin Y. Lu
(Yale School of Medicine
Yale School of Medicine
Yale School of Medicine)
- Biqing Zhu
(Yale University)
- Katie N. Murray
(Yale School of Medicine)
- Yann S. Mineur
(Yale School of Medicine)
- Cuiling Zhang
(Yale School of Medicine)
- Di Xu
(Yale School of Medicine
Yale School of Medicine)
- Elizabeth Lin
(Yale School of Medicine
Yale School of Medicine
Yale School of Medicine)
- Joseph Luchsinger
(Yale School of Medicine)
- Sagar Bhatta
(Yale School of Medicine
Yale School of Medicine)
- Daniel A. Waizman
(Yale School of Medicine
Yale School of Medicine)
- Mackenzie E. Coden
(Yale School of Medicine
Yale School of Medicine)
- Yifan Ma
(Yale School of Medicine
Yale School of Medicine)
- Kavita Israni-Winger
(Yale School of Medicine
Yale School of Medicine)
- Anthony Russo
(Yale School of Medicine)
- Haowei Wang
(Yale School of Medicine)
- Wenzhi Song
(Yale School of Medicine
Yale School of Medicine)
- Jafar Al Souz
(Yale School of Medicine
Yale School of Medicine)
- Hongyu Zhao
(Yale University
Yale University)
- Joseph E. Craft
(Yale School of Medicine
Yale School of Medicine)
- Marina R. Picciotto
(Yale School of Medicine)
- Jaime Grutzendler
(Yale School of Medicine)
- Marcello Distasio
(Yale School of Medicine
Yale School of Medicine)
- Noah W. Palm
(Yale School of Medicine)
- David A. Hafler
(Yale School of Medicine
Yale School of Medicine)
- Andrew Wang
(Yale School of Medicine
Yale School of Medicine)
Abstract
Specialized immune cells that reside in tissues orchestrate diverse biological functions by communicating with parenchymal cells1. The contribution of the innate immune compartment in the meninges and the central nervous system (CNS) is well-characterized; however, whether cells of the adaptive immune system reside in the brain and are involved in maintaining homeostasis is unclear2–4. Here we show that the subfornical organ (SFO) of the brain is a nucleus for parenchymal αβ T cells in the steady-state brain in both mice and humans. Using unbiased transcriptomics, we show that these extravascular T cells in the brain are distinct from meningeal T cells: they secrete IFNγ robustly and express tissue-residence proteins such as CXCR6, which are required for their retention in the brain and for normal adaptive behaviour. These T cells are primed in the periphery by the microbiome, and traffic from the white adipose and gastrointestinal tissues to the brain. Once established, their numbers can be modulated by alterations to either the gut microbiota or the composition of adipose tissue. In summary, we find that CD4 T cells reside in the brain at steady state and are anatomically concentrated in the SFO in mice and humans; that they are transcriptionally and functionally distinct from meningeal T cells; and that they secrete IFNγ to maintain CNS homeostasis through homeostatic fat–brain and gut–brain axes.
Suggested Citation
Tomomi M. Yoshida & Mytien Nguyen & Le Zhang & Benjamin Y. Lu & Biqing Zhu & Katie N. Murray & Yann S. Mineur & Cuiling Zhang & Di Xu & Elizabeth Lin & Joseph Luchsinger & Sagar Bhatta & Daniel A. Wai, 2025.
"The subfornical organ is a nucleus for gut-derived T cells that regulate behaviour,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 643(8071), pages 499-508, July.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:643:y:2025:i:8071:d:10.1038_s41586-025-09050-7
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09050-7
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