Microvascular immunity is organ-specific and concealed in peripheral blood

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Abstract

Blood tests are a common method for diagnosing and monitoring various health conditions. Nevertheless, the extent to which phlebotomy can offer insights into immune and organ dysfunction remains uncertain. Here, we conducted a comprehensive analysis of blood-borne leukocytes in the microvasculature of different mouse organs and compared it to peripheral blood and parenchymal samples. We observed that microvascular immune cells outnumber tissue-resident counterparts in the kidney, liver and lung. Classical monocytes and lymphocytes are diminished while nonclassical and SSC-high monocytes are enriched compared to blood. Utilizing single-cell sequencing, we identified specific cell populations up to 100-fold expanded in the kidney vasculature including macrophages, plasmacytoid dendritic cells, B cells, and innate lymphoid cells type 2. Microvascular enrichment could trigger a local phenotype switch as shown in glomerulus-restricted B cells. Peritonitis and acute kidney injury (AKI) elicited a multifaceted and systemic response of microvascular leukocytes. It involved remote organ effects, such as a 16-fold increase of leukocytes in the splenic circulation or 64-fold increase of SSC-high monocytes in the liver circulation that was not detectable in the peripheral blood or the tissue. Following full recovery from AKI, persistent and complex changes were observed predominantly in the renal vasculature, while most leukocytes in the peripheral blood had already returned to baseline levels. Collectively, our findings suggest a paradigm of organ- and disease-specific microvascular immunity that largely eludes conventional blood and tissue analysis.

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