| Literature DB >> 9103229 |
G R Yeaman1, P M Guyre, M W Fanger, J E Collins, H D White, W Rathbun, K A Orndorff, J Gonzalez, J E Stern, C R Wira.
Abstract
Using confocal scanning laser microscopy of viable tissue sections, we have demonstrated organized lymphoid aggregates (LA), that have a unique structure, in the stratum basalis of uterine endometrium. These LA consist of a core of B cells surrounded by more numerous T cells and an outer halo of monocytes/ macrophages. The T cells in the LA were almost exclusively CD8+CD4-. These CD8+ LA, in terms of both their T cell and B cell components, were either small or absent during the early proliferative stage of the menstrual cycle, significantly larger in size at mid-cycle and during the secretory phase, and absent in post-menopausal women, suggesting that their development is hormonally influenced. This new finding of a menstrual cycle-dependent, phenotypically unique, organized immune cell structure may lead to new insights into the mechanisms by which the endometrium accepts a semiallogeneic graft while providing resistance to infectious organisms.Entities:
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Year: 1997 PMID: 9103229
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Leukoc Biol ISSN: 0741-5400 Impact factor: 4.962