Lymphocyte trafficking Flashcards
Describe naive lymphocyte circulation
Enter circulation from primary lymphoid organs –> blood –> LNs/secondary lymphoid organs –> lymph –> thoracic duct –> blood (does not reenter primary lymphoid organs
Why do naive lymphocytes continually circulate?
- to continually survey for Ag.s
- to distribute the large number of lymphocytes throughout the body
Describe how live imaging techniques have demonstrated arrest of CD8+ T cells in the presence of Ag in LN
no peptide:
- lots of movement
some peptide:
- some movement
lots of peptide:
- less movement
Describe the tricellular complexes that form in LNs
CD4+ T cell + CD8+ T cell + DC
Where do cells enter the LN?
via HEVs
Describe where HEVs are found, and when they are developed and the consequences of this
- found in all secondary lymphoid organs except for the spleen
- HEVs don’t develop in a germ free environment –> important for newborns to be exposed to Ag so they develop an immune system
What are the three keys to lymphocyte trafficking?
- cell adhesion molecules –> slow down
- chemokine R’s –> address
- S1PR1 –> cycling in and out
What are the four families of cell adhesion molecules?
- mucin-like CAMs (e.g CD34) bind to selectins (e.g. L-selectin/CD62L)
- integrins (e.g. LFA-1) bind to Ig superfamily members (e.g. ICAM-1)
What are the two major functions of cell adhesion molecules?
- increase connections between immune cells to facilitate activation responses (e.g. Th + APC)
- increase leukocyte adherence to endothelium before extravasation, transendothelial migration
What are the primary functions of chemokines?
major regulators of leukocyte traffic
What are the two types of chemokines?
housekeeping and inflammatory
Where do chemokines localize circulating leukocytes to?
- secondary lymphoid organs
- specific microenvironments within lymphoid tissues
- sites of inflammation
Describe the R’s that each type of cell has and where this localizes these cells: naive T and B cells; naive T cells; naive B cells; activated B cells; activated T cells
naive T and B cells: CCR7 –> HEV
naive T cells: CCR7 –> T cell zone
naive B cells: CXCR5 –> B cell zone
activated B cells: CCR7 –> T cell zone
activated T cells: various receptors to localize them into specific tissues
Describe how rolling, activation, arrest/adhesion, and transendotherlia migration occur
- rolling
- L-selectin binds to CD34
- LFA-1 in low affinity state - activation
- HEV hold chemokines that bind to CCR7
- CCR7 is activated and activates LFA-1 to high affinity state (sticky) - arrest/adhesion
- LFA-1 binds to ICAM-1
4 transendothelia migration
- LFA-1 is needed for this step
- move from blood to LN
What kind of molecule is S1P, what does it bind to?
bioactive lipid that binds to 5 distinct GPCRs (e.g. S1PR1)