In Fight Against Brain Pathogens, The Eyes Have It

Yale researchers find eyes share immune response with the brain, enabling eye-injected vaccines to combat herpes and protect against infections.
Researchers showed that vaccines injected into the eyes of mice can help disable the herpes virus, a major cause of brain encephalitis. (Representational Image: Unsplash)
Researchers showed that vaccines injected into the eyes of mice can help disable the herpes virus, a major cause of brain encephalitis. (Representational Image: Unsplash)
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The eyes have been called the window to the brain. It turns out they also serve as an immunological barrier that protects the organ from pathogens and even tumors, Yale researchers have found.

In a new study, researchers showed that vaccines injected into the eyes of mice can help disable the herpes virus, a major cause of brain encephalitis. To their surprise, the vaccine activates an immune response through lymphatic vessels along the optic nerve.

Researchers showed that vaccines injected into the eyes of mice can help disable the herpes virus, a major cause of brain encephalitis. (Representational Image: Unsplash)
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The results were published Feb. 28 in the journal Nature. Xiangyun Yin, an associate researcher in Yale’s Department of Immunobiology; Sophia Zhang, an undergraduate student at Yale College; and Ju Hyun Lee, a doctoral student in the Department of Biomedical Engineering, are co-lead authors of the study.

There is a shared immune response between the brain and the eye. And the eyes provide easier access for drug therapies than the brain does.
Eric Song, Associate research scientist and Resident physician in Yale School of Medicine’s Department of Immunobiology

There is a shared immune response between the brain and the eye. And the eyes provide easier access for drug therapies than the brain does.

Wanting to explore immunological interactions between brain and eyes, the research team, which was led by Song, found that the eyes have two distinct lymphatic systems regulating immune responses in the front and rear of the eye.

After they vaccinated mice with inactivated herpes virus, the researchers found that lymphatic vessels in the optic nerve sheath at the rear of the eye protected mice not only from active herpes infections, but from bacteria and even brain tumors.

Harnessing this new biology, Song’s team is currently testing newly created drugs from his lab delivered through eye injections that may help combat macular edema, or leaky blood vessels of the retina common in people with diabetes, and glaucoma.

The researchers found that lymphatic vessels in the optic nerve sheath at the rear of the eye protected mice not only from active herpes infections, but from bacteria and even brain tumors. (Representational Image: Unsplash)
The researchers found that lymphatic vessels in the optic nerve sheath at the rear of the eye protected mice not only from active herpes infections, but from bacteria and even brain tumors. (Representational Image: Unsplash)

“These results reveal a shared lymphatic circuit able to mount a unified immune response between posterior eye and the brain, highlighting an understudied immunological feature of the eyes and opening up the potential for new therapeutic strategies in ocular and central nervous system diseases,” the authors wrote.

(Newswise/NJ)

Researchers showed that vaccines injected into the eyes of mice can help disable the herpes virus, a major cause of brain encephalitis. (Representational Image: Unsplash)
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