| Literature DB >> 21360702 |
Nina Maeshima1, Grace F T Poon, Manisha Dosanjh, Jackie Felberg, Sally S M Lee, Jennifer L Cross, Darlene Birkenhead, Pauline Johnson.
Abstract
CD44 is expressed on T cells where its ability to bind hyaluronan is tightly regulated. Here, we investigated when T cells bind hyaluronan during an immune response. We found that naïve, murine T cells do not bind fluoresceinated hyaluronan but are induced to bind upon antigen-induced T-cell activation in vitro and in vivo. Hyaluronan binding occurred on proliferating T cells and the percentage of hyaluronan-binding cells correlated with the strength of the activation stimulus. A small percentage of hyaluronan-binding cells persisted after in vitro activation and had a memory phenotype (CD122(+) CD44(hi)). This hyaluronan-binding population increased after culture with IL-7 or IL-15 and proliferated more rapidly than nonbinding cells. In vivo, approximately 20-30% of antigen-specific OT-I CD8(+) memory T cells in the spleen and BM bound hyaluronan. Hyaluronan binding identified memory cells that proliferated faster in IL-7 and IL-15, and enriched for CD62L(+) central memory cells. In vivo homeostatic proliferation induced hyaluronan binding on a small percentage of the most rapidly dividing cells after several cell divisions. This study demonstrates that hyaluronan binding is induced upon antigen-induced T-cell activation and occurs on a percentage of the most proliferative activated and memory T cells.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21360702 DOI: 10.1002/eji.201040870
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Immunol ISSN: 0014-2980 Impact factor: 5.532