Journal article
A diverse fibroblastic stromal cell landscape in the spleen directs tissue homeostasis and immunity
YO Alexandre, D Schienstock, HJ Lee, LC Gandolfo, CG Williams, S Devi, B Pal, JR Groom, W Cao, SN Christo, CL Gordon, G Starkey, R D’Costa, LK Mackay, A Haque, B Ludewig, GT Belz, SN Mueller
Science Immunology | AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE | Published : 2022
Abstract
The spleen is a compartmentalized organ that serves as a blood filter and safeguard of systemic immune surveillance. Labyrinthine networks of fibroblastic stromal cells construct complex niches within the white pulp and red pulp that are important for tissue homeostasis and immune activation. However, the identity and roles of the global splenic fibroblastic stromal cells in homeostasis and immune responses are poorly defined. Here, we performed a cellular and molecular dissection of the splenic reticular stromal cell landscape. We found that white pulp fibroblastic reticular cells (FRCs) responded robustly during acute viral infection, but this program of gene regulation was suppressed duri..
View full abstractRelated Projects (3)
Grants
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Australian Research Council (DP140101246 to S.N.M.) and the National Health and Medical Research Council (Senior Research Fellowship 1136550 to S.N.M.). This research was undertaken using the LIEF HPC-GPGPU Facility hosted at the University of Melbourne. This facility was established with the assistance of LIEF Grant LE170100200.