Abstract

While the external environment has been shown to shape the systemic human immune landscape, defining the in vivo immune status of peripheral tissues has remained a technical challenge. We recently developed functional in vivo confocal microscopy (Fun-IVCM) for dynamic, longitudinal imaging of corneal immune cells in living humans. This study investigated the effect of seasonal-driven environmental factors on the density, morphology and dynamic behavior of human corneal immune cell subsets. Longitudinal, observational clinical study. Sixteen healthy participants (18-40 years) attended two visits in distinct seasons in Melbourne, Australia (Visit 1: Spring/Summer: November-December 2021; Visit 2: Autumn/Winter: April-June 2022). Environmental data were collected over each period. Participants underwent ocular surface examinations and corneal Fun-IVCM (Heidelberg HRT-3, Rostock Corneal Module). Volume scans (80μm) were acquired at 5.5±1.5 minute intervals, for up to five timepoints. Time-lapse videos were created to analyze corneal immune cells, comprising epithelial T cells and dendritic cells (DCs), and stromal macrophages. Tear cytokines were analyzed using multiplex bead-based immunoassay. Difference in the density, morphological and dynamic parameters of corneal immune cell subsets over the study periods. Visit 1 was characterized by higher temperature, lower humidity, and higher air particulate and pollen levels than Visit 2. Clinical ocular surface parameters, and the density of immune cell subsets were similar across visits. At Visit 1 (Spring/Summer), corneal epithelial DCs were larger and more elongated, with a lower dendrite probing speed (0.38±0.21 vs 0.68±0.33μm/min, p<0.001) relative to Visit 2; stromal macrophages were more circular and had less dynamic activity (Visit 1: 7.2±1.9 vs Visit 2: 10.3±3.7 'dancing index', p<0.001). T cell morphology and dynamics were unchanged across periods. Basal tear levels of IL-2 and CXCL10 were lower during Spring/Summer. This novel study shows that the in vivo morphodynamics of innate corneal immune cells (DCs, macrophages) are modified by environmental factors, but such effects are not evident for adaptive immune cells (T cells). The cornea is a potential non-invasive, in vivo 'window' to season-dependent changes to the human immune system, with capacity to yield new insight into environmental influences on immune regulation.

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