Periarteriolar stroma cells guide T cells from the red to the white pulp in the spleen.
Chang H KimQingyang LiuPublished in: Cellular & molecular immunology (2020)
While both the spleen and lymph nodes are called secondary lymphoid tissues, how lymphocytes enter these tissues are quite different from each other. This is because the architecture of the two types of organs and the mode of lymphocyte migration into these organs are quite distinct. In the spleen, T cells are passively released in the blood flow from the arterioles in the red pulp and marginal zone area. In contrast, T cells in the blood are actively captured on high endothelial venules in lymph nodes by the coordinated actions of CCR7 and several adhesion molecules. A recent finding indicates that T cells, released in the red pulp and marginal zone areas, actively find their way to the white zone by utilizing the migration track created by periarteriolar stromal cells. This finding adds one more piece to our understanding of lymphocyte migration for effective adaptive immune responses in the spleen.
Keyphrases
- lymph node
- blood flow
- peripheral blood
- immune response
- gene expression
- induced apoptosis
- magnetic resonance
- dendritic cells
- magnetic resonance imaging
- cell cycle arrest
- regulatory t cells
- oxidative stress
- signaling pathway
- computed tomography
- cell death
- staphylococcus aureus
- cell proliferation
- inflammatory response
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell migration
- rectal cancer