| Literature DB >> 28066423 |
Morgan C Hunter1, Alvaro Teijeira2, Cornelia Halin1.
Abstract
T cell migration within and between peripheral tissues and secondary lymphoid organs is essential for proper functioning of adaptive immunity. While active T cell migration within a tissue is fairly slow, blood vessels and lymphatic vessels (LVs) serve as speedy highways that enable T cells to travel rapidly over long distances. The molecular and cellular mechanisms of T cell migration out of blood vessels have been intensively studied over the past 30 years. By contrast, less is known about T cell trafficking through the lymphatic vasculature. This migratory process occurs in one manner within lymph nodes (LNs), where recirculating T cells continuously exit into efferent lymphatics to return to the blood circulation. In another manner, T cell trafficking through lymphatics also occurs in peripheral tissues, where T cells exit the tissue by means of afferent lymphatics, to migrate to draining LNs and back into blood. In this review, we highlight how the anatomy of the lymphatic vasculature supports T cell trafficking and review current knowledge regarding the molecular and cellular requirements of T cell migration through LVs. Finally, we summarize and discuss recent insights regarding the presumed relevance of T cell trafficking through afferent lymphatics.Entities:
Keywords: T cells; afferent; efferent; lymph node; lymphatic vessels; migration; trafficking
Year: 2016 PMID: 28066423 PMCID: PMC5174098 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2016.00613
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1T cell traffic through the lymphatic vascular system. (A) Recirculating effector-memory T cells in peripheral tissues ➀ enter afferent lymphatic vessels (LVs). The exact point of entry or the mode of intralymphatic movement has not been investigated so far. T cells that ➁ arrive in the lymph node (LN) subcapsular sinus (SCS) have been shown to cross the lymphatic endothelium into the LN parenchyma at the level of the ➂ SCS or of the ➃ medullary sinuses. Some T cells do not enter the LN parenchyma but ➄ directly exit through the efferent LV located at the hilus region of the LN. Recirculating naïve and central memory T cells arrive in the LN either via the blood (high endothelial venules) or via the afferent LV draining from an upstream LN (i.e., efferent lymph). ❶ T cells within the LN ❷ make random contact with the sinuses before entering and ❸ actively crawling or passively flowing within the sinuses. T cells were observed to ❹ cross the sinuses several times before finally being ❺ passively carried away into the efferent LV. T cells in the efferent LV circulate through downstream LNs before being returned to the blood circulation via the thoracic duct. (B) Lymphatic capillaries are composed of oak leaf-shaped lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs), which partially overlap and are held together by button-like associated junctional adhesion molecules (red lines). This setup creates open flaps through which leukocytes, fluid, and macromolecules enter into the vessel lumen. (C) LECs in collecting vessels have a cuboidal shape and are connected by continuous cell-cell junctions (red lines). Collecting vessels contain intraluminal valves and are surrounded by a basement membrane and contracting smooth muscles cells (orange).
Molecules regulating T cell exit from lymph nodes (LNs) through efferent lymphatic vessels (LVs).
| Molecule | Selected reference | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| S1P1/S1P | ( | S1P1-deficient T cells are retained in LNs; disruption of S1P gradient in LNs prevents T cell egress |
| CD69 | ( | CD69 expression induces S1P1 internalization and degradation in T cells resulting in T cell retention in LNs |
| C–C chemokine receptor type 7 (CCR7) | ( | CCR7−/− T cells egress more rapidly from LNs whereas CCR7 overexpressing T cells are retained |
| CXCR4 | ( | Synergizes with CCR7 in retaining T cells in LNs |
| Leukocyte function-associated antigen 1 (LFA-1)/intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) | ( | CD4+ LFA-1−/− T cells egress more rapidly from LNs. |
| Common lymphatic endothelial and vascular endothelial receptor-1 (CLEVER-1) | ( | Blockade of CLEVER-1 reduces T cell binding to LN sinuses |
| Mannose receptor (MR)/L-selectin | ( | Blockade of MR/L-selectin reduces T cell binding to LN sinuses |
| α9 integrin | ( | Blockade of LEC-expressed α9 reduces T cell egress from LNs |
Molecules regulating T cell migration through afferent lymphatic vessels (LVs) into lymph nodes (LNs).
| Molecule | Selected reference | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| CCR7 | ( | Adoptively transferred or endogenous CCR7−/− T cells have reduced migration from peripheral tissues to dLNs |
| S1P1/S1P | ( | Treatment of adoptively transferred CD4+ T cells or recipient mice with FTY720 or S1P significantly reduces T cell migration to dLNs |
| CD44/mannose receptor (MR) | ( | T cell-expressed CD44 interacts with LEC-expressed MR during CD4+ and CD8+ T cell migration into afferent LVs |
| Common lymphatic endothelial and vascular endothelial receptor-1 (CLEVER-1) | ( | CLEVER-1 blockade decreases CD4+ and CD8+ T cell migration from the skin to the dLN |
| LT and VCAM-1 | ( | Shown to mediate migration of nTreg from skin to dLNs |
| Macrophage scavenger receptor 1 | ( | Regulates lymphocyte entry into the LN parenchyma |
| PLVAP (MECA-32) | ( | Mediates lymphocyte entry across the subcapsular sinus into the LN parenchyma |
| Tool | Description | Selected reference |
|---|---|---|
| Cannulation studies | This procedure involves the surgical insertion of cannula (tube) directly into an afferent or efferent vessel or into the cisterna chyli, to collect lymph fluid. The cellular composition of lymph is subsequently analyzed, typically by flow cytometry or microscopy methods | ( |
| Adoptive transfer | In adoptive transfer experiments, cells are isolated from donor mice, fluorescently labeled (unless already marked by endogenous expression of a fluorophore or a congenic marker) and intravenously or subcutaneously injected into a recipient mouse. In some cases, T cells are subjected to an | ( |
| Intravital microscopy (IVM) | This technique allows the study of migratory processes at the single-cell level and in real time. It involves fluorescence-based time-lapse imaging by, e.g., confocal-/multiphoton- or stereomicroscopy. Several mouse reporter lines expressing a fluorescent protein in lymphatic vessels (LVs) have been generated ( | ( |
| Intralymphatic injection | Microinjection of T cells directly into a LV upstream of a draining lymph node. Similar to adoptive transfer but permits the study of T cell entry specifically across the LN subcapsular sinus. This represents an elegant yet technically challenging method complementing IVM studies | ( |
| LN egress studies | This experimental setup allows quantifying dwell time of T cells in LNs. In a typical experiment, fluorescently labeled T cells are first transferred intravenously into a recipient mouse. After an equilibration phase, further T cell ingress into LNs is blocked by administration of entry-blocking antibodies (e.g., directed against the integrin subunit α4 or against L-selectin). Antibody treatment allows the uncoupling of T cell entry from exit, which continues to occur. Exit rates, for example, can be calculated by comparing fluorescent T cell numbers in LNs at the time of antibody injection to a later time point (e.g., 24 h later; flow cytometry-based quantification) | ( |
| Photoconvertible transgenic mice | The use of photoconvertible transgenic mice permits monitoring the migration of endogenously labeled cells | ( |