| Literature DB >> 26186200 |
Zoltán Kellermayer1,2, Haruko Hayasaka3, Béla Kajtár4, Diána Simon1, Eloy F Robles5, Jose A Martinez-Climent5, Péter Balogh1,2.
Abstract
Despite their functional similarities, peripheral lymphoid tissues are remarkably different according to their developmental properties and structural characteristics, including their specified vasculature. Access of leukocytes to these organs critically depends on their interactions with the local endothelium, where endothelial cells are patterned to display a restricted set of adhesion molecules and other regulatory compounds necessary for extravasation. Recent advances in high throughput analyses of highly purified endothelial subsets in various lymphoid tissues as well as the expansion of various transgenic animal models have shed new light on the transcriptional complexities of lymphoid tissue vascular endothelium. This review is aimed at providing a comprehensive analysis linking the functional competence of spleen and intestinal lymphoid tissues with the developmental programming and functional divergence of their vascular specification, with particular emphasis on the transcriptional control of endothelial cells exerted by Nkx2.3 homeodomain transcription factor.Entities:
Keywords: Endothelium; Nkx2.3; Peyer patches; patterning; spleen
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26186200 DOI: 10.3109/08830185.2015.1059427
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Rev Immunol ISSN: 0883-0185 Impact factor: 5.311