Abstract: Infiltration of immune cells in the central nervous system is a common hallmark in different neuroinflammatory conditions. Accumulating evidences indicate that resident glial cells can establish a cross-talk with infiltrated immune cells, including T-cells, regulating their recruitment, activation and function within the CNS. Although the healthy CNS has been though to be devoid of professional dendritic cells (DCs), numerous studies have been reported the presence of a population of DCs in specific locations such as the meninges, choroid plexu...
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Topics: 
Cell biology
Neuroscience
Immunology