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RESEARCH PRODUCT
CCR7 on CD4+ T Cells Plays a Crucial Role in the Induction of Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis
René GollanPatrick BelikanVolker SiffrinChristina WolfGautam PramanikFrauke ZippUlrike Bühlersubject
0301 basic medicineAdoptive cell transferChemistryEncephalomyelitisT cellImmunologyExperimental autoimmune encephalomyelitisPriming (immunology)chemical and pharmacologic phenomenahemic and immune systemsmedicine.disease03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biology0302 clinical medicinemedicine.anatomical_structureImmune systemAntigenimmune system diseasesImmunologymedicineImmunology and AllergytissuesNeuroinflammation030215 immunologydescription
Abstract Multiple sclerosis (MS) is the most common chronic inflammatory demyelinating disease of the CNS. Myelin-specific CD4+ Th lymphocytes are known to play a major role in both MS and its animal model experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). CCR7 is a critical element for immune cell trafficking and recirculation, that is, lymph node homing, under homeostatic conditions; blocking CCR7+ central memory cells from egress of lymph nodes is a therapeutic approach in MS. To define the effect of CD4+ T cell–specific constitutive deletion of CCR7 in the priming and effector phase in EAE, we used an active EAE approach in T cell reconstituted Rag1−/− mice, as well as adoptive transfer EAE, in which mice received in vitro–primed CCR7−/− or CCR7+/+ myelin Ag TCR-transgenic 2d2 Th17 cells. Two-photon laser scanning microscopy was applied in living anesthetized mice to monitor the trafficking of CCR7-deficient and wild-type CD4+ T cells in inflammatory lesions within the CNS. We demonstrate that CD4+ T cell–specific constitutive deletion of CCR7 led to impaired induction of active EAE. In adoptive transfer EAE, mice receiving in vitro–primed CCR7−/− 2d2 Th17 cells showed similar disease onset as mice adoptively transferred with CCR7+/+ 2d2 Th17 cells. Using two-photon laser scanning microscopy CCR7−/− and CCR7+/+ CD4+ T cells did not reveal differences in motility in either animal model of MS. These findings indicate a crucial role of CCR7 in neuroinflammation during the priming of autoimmune CD4+ T cells but not in the CNS.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-04-15 | The Journal of Immunology |