Swiss researchers have gained new insights into the relationship between aging, inflammation, neurodegeneration and cognitive decline. EPFL professor Andrea Ablasser and her team showed that brain aging was driven by microglial activation of the cGAS/STING pathway.
Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are often recurrent. The organism does not always establish an effective line of defense that protects from reinfection. The key lies in two reservoirs of bacteria and how tissue-resident memory T cells (TRMs) trigger the immune response. A recent paper from the Pasteur Institute in France describes how these cells mediate immunity to defeat reinfection.
An allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation that triggers graft-vs.-host-disease (GVHD) involves T cells that do not come from the patient's bloodstream, but rather from the local progenitor cells of the donor tissue. A study from the University of Pittsburgh confirmed this finding after cloning and following these cells, revealing their origin and peculiarities.
“I have had this idea for a pretty long time. In the tissues there are antigen-presenting cells and there are T cells. And I felt like there is no reason why they are needed to be input from blood that it could be a largely local response. Then, the question was whether there would be a subset of cells in the tissues that could continue to sustain it,” lead author Warren Shlomchik told BioWorld.