Salmonella infection induces the reorganisation of follicular dendritic cell networks concomitant with the failure to generate germinal centres

Edith Marcial-Juárez, Marisol Perez-Toledo, Saba Nayar, Elena Pipi, Areej Alshayea, Ruby Persaud, Sian E. Jossi, Rachel Lamerton, Francesca Barone, Ian R. Henderson, Adam F. Cunningham

Research output: Working paper/PreprintPreprint

Abstract

Germinal centres (GCs) are sites where plasma and memory B cells form to generate high-affinity, Ig class switched antibodies. Specialised stromal cells called follicular dendritic cells (FDCs) are essential for GC formation. During systemic Salmonella Typhimurium (STm) infection GCs are absent, whereas extensive extrafollicular switched antibody responses are maintained. The mechanisms that underpin the absence of GC formation are incompletely understood. Here, we show that STm-induces a reversible disruption of niches within the splenic microenvironment, including the T and B cell compartments and the marginal zone. Alongside to these effects post-infection, mature FDC networks are strikingly absent, whereas immature FDC precursors, including marginal sinus pre-FDCs (MadCAM-1+) and perivascular Pre-FDCs (PDGFRβ+) are enriched. As normal FDC networks re-establish, extensive GCs become detectable throughout the spleen. Therefore, the reorganisation of FDC networks and the loss of GC responses are key, parallel features of systemic STm infections.
Original languageEnglish
PublisherbioRxiv
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 12 Dec 2022

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