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  4. Spatiotemporal Control of Type 1 Helper T-cell Activation in the Inflamed Skin

Spatiotemporal Control of Type 1 Helper T-cell Activation in the Inflamed Skin

File(s)
Bala_cornellgrad_0058F_14732.pdf (52.99 MB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://doi.org/10.7298/y2e0-0j71
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/117530
Collections
Cornell Theses and Dissertations
Author
Bala, Noor
Abstract

T-cell-mediated pathogen control involves a multi-step, tissue-level response that istightly regulated. Immune cell aggregation within perivascular niches (PVNs) plays a pivotal role in orchestrating tissue immunity during infection, autoimmunity, and cancer. However, the mechanisms driving PVN assembly and the activation signals they provide remain poorly understood. Here, we integrate dynamic time-resolved in vivo imaging with a novel spatially resolved platform to interrogate the microanatomy, transcriptome, immune phenotypes, and inflammatory mediators within skin PVNs. In Chapter 3, we demonstrate that CXCL10+ PVNs establish a site that coordinates Th1 and myeloid cell positioning, facilitating critical Th1 activation signals. Th1 cells reside in PVNs for approximately 24 hours, receiving initial cues that enable their functional deployment to the inflamed dermal parenchyma. Building on these findings, Chapter 4 highlights the role of CCR2-dependent myeloid cells in driving Th1 IFN_ production. PVN myeloid cells displayed a cooperative activation and signaling program supportive of activation of Th1 cells. The interaction between CCR2+ PVN myeloid cells induces functional changes within Th1 cells while promoting CXCR2-dependent myeloid cell aggregation that sustains PVN assembly. These interactions underscore a critical tissue-organizing function of Th1 cells, rapidly acquired upon the first 24 hours of tissue entry, that enhances regional immunity. In Chapter 5, we reveal that after 24 hours in the tissue, Th1 cells undergo a molecular switch in integrin and chemokine receptor expression. This transition coincides with metabolic iv reprogramming to a glycolysis-dominant state and upregulation of effector cytokines, enabling their full functional maturation. Together, these results establish PVNs as dynamic hubs of immune coordination, where niche-enriched signals drive reciprocal interactions between Th1 and myeloid cells to regulate tissue immunity. As we identified transcriptionally similar PVNs in human skin, these findings may have physiological relevance to human health. Targeting PVN-associated factors could provide new therapeutic strategies to enhance T-cell immunity in infection, autoimmunity, and cancer.

Description
201 pages
Date Issued
2025-05
Committee Chair
Fowell, Deborah
Committee Member
Rudd, Brian
Nishimura, Nozomi
Leifer, Cynthia
Degree Discipline
Biomedical and Biological Sciences
Degree Name
Ph. D., Biomedical and Biological Sciences
Degree Level
Doctor of Philosophy
Type
dissertation or thesis
Link(s) to Catalog Record
https://newcatalog.library.cornell.edu/catalog/16938263

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