Abstract

Secondary lymphoid organ chemokine (SLC) is expressed in high endothelial venules and in T cell zones of spleen and lymph nodes (LNs) and strongly attracts naive T cells. In mice homozygous for the paucity of lymph node T cell (plt) mutation, naive T cells fail to home to LNs or the lymphoid regions of spleen. Here we demonstrate that expression of SLC is undetectable in plt mice. In addition to the defect in T cell homing, we demonstrate that dendritic cells (DCs) fail to accumulate in spleen and LN T cell zones of plt mice. DC migration to LNs after contact sensitization is also substantially reduced. The physiologic significance of these abnormalities in plt mice is indicated by a markedly increased sensitivity to infection with murine hepatitis virus. The plt mutation maps to the SLC locus; however, the sequence of SLC introns and exons in plt mice is normal. These findings suggest that the abnormalities in plt mice are due to a genetic defect in the expression of SLC and that SLC mediates the entry of naive T cells and antigen-stimulated DCs into the T cell zones of secondary lymphoid organs.

Keywords

High endothelial venulesLymphocyte homing receptorHoming (biology)BiologySpleenImmunologyT cellDendritic cellLymphatic systemCCL19Lymph nodeT lymphocyteChemokineMolecular biologyAntigenChemokine receptorCellImmune systemCell adhesionGenetics

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Publication Info

Year
1999
Type
article
Volume
189
Issue
3
Pages
451-460
Citations
1011
Access
Closed

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1011
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65
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Cite This

Michael D. Gunn, Shigeru Kyuwa, Carmen Tam‐Amersdorfer et al. (1999). Mice Lacking Expression of Secondary Lymphoid Organ Chemokine Have Defects in Lymphocyte Homing and Dendritic Cell Localization. The Journal of Experimental Medicine , 189 (3) , 451-460. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.189.3.451

Identifiers

DOI
10.1084/jem.189.3.451
PMID
9927507
PMCID
2192914

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%