6533b7d1fe1ef96bd125cf60
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Differentiation of Effector/Memory Vδ2 T Cells and Migratory Routes in Lymph Nodes or Inflammatory Sites
Caterina Di SanoGuido SireciFrancesco DieliAlfredo SalernoAlfredo SalernoFabrizio PocciaMartin LippNadia Caccamosubject
Immunologychemical and pharmacologic phenomenachemokine receptorsBiologyMajor histocompatibility complexArticleeffector functions03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineAntigenimmune system diseasesCell MovementT-Lymphocyte SubsetsLymph node stromal cellImmunology and AllergyAnimalsHumansCell LineageIL-2 receptorAntigen-presenting cell030304 developmental biologyγδ cellsInflammation0303 health sciencesEffectorvirus diseasesphosphoantigenshemic and immune systemsfunctional subsetsCell DifferentiationTumor Necrosis Factor Receptor Superfamily Member 7PhenotypeImmunologybiology.proteinLeukocyte Common AntigensLymphLymph NodesImmunologic Memory030215 immunologyHoming (hematopoietic)description
Vδ2 T lymphocytes recognize nonpeptidic antigens without presentation by MHC molecules and mount both immediate effector functions and memory responses after microbial infection. However, how Vδ2 T cells mediate different facets of a memory response remains unknown. Here, we show that the expression of CD45RA and CD27 antigens defines four subsets of human Vδ2 T cells with distinctive compartmentalization routes. Naive CD45RA+CD27+ and memory CD45RA−CD27+ cells express lymph node homing receptors, abound in lymph nodes, and lack immediate effector functions. Conversely, memory CD45RA−CD27− and terminally differentiated CD45RA+CD27− cells, which express receptors for homing to inflamed tissues, are poorly represented in the lymph nodes while abounding at sites of inflammation, and display immediate effector functions. These observations and additional in vitro experiments indicate a lineage differentiation pattern for human Vδ2 T cells that generates naive cells circulating in lymph nodes, effector/memory cells patrolling the blood, and terminally differentiated effector cells residing in inflamed tissues.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2003-08-04 | The Journal of Experimental Medicine |