A high endothelial cell-derived chemokine induces rapid, efficient, and subset-selective arrest of rolling T lymphocytes on a reconstituted endothelial substrate.
The homing of lymphocytes to secondary lymphoid organs is thought to involve the action of chemokines. Secondary lymphoid-tissue chemokine (SLC), a high endothelial venule (HEV)-associated chemokine, has emerged as a candidate for participating in this process. We now show that immobilized SLC strongly induces beta2 integrin-mediated binding of T lymphocytes of naive phenotype and B lymphocytes to ICAM-1 under static conditions. This effect is not mediated by beta2 integrin affinity modulation, because SLC does not elicit a beta2 integrin activation epitope (mAb24) on naive T lymphocytes. In a parallel plate flow chamber, lymphocytes rolling via L-selectin are rapidly arrested through beta2 integrins in a pertussis toxin-sensitive manner on a substrate consisting of L-selectin ligands (peripheral lymph node addressins) together with ICAM-1 and SLC. Naive T lymphocytes are arrested on the HEV substrate with sixfold higher efficiency than memory cells. Neutrophils roll, but are not arrested by SLC, whereas they respond to immobilized IL-8 with rapid arrest. Thus, our artificial HEV system recapitulates critical features of lymphocyte interactions with HEV in vivo. These observations strongly point to the participation of SLC in homing of lymphocytes to secondary lymphoid organs.
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Related Subject Headings
- Time Factors
- T-Lymphocyte Subsets
- Receptors, Lymphocyte Homing
- Neutrophils
- Lymphocyte Function-Associated Antigen-1
- Immunology
- Immunologic Memory
- Humans
- GTP-Binding Proteins
- Epitopes, T-Lymphocyte
Citation
Published In
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Time Factors
- T-Lymphocyte Subsets
- Receptors, Lymphocyte Homing
- Neutrophils
- Lymphocyte Function-Associated Antigen-1
- Immunology
- Immunologic Memory
- Humans
- GTP-Binding Proteins
- Epitopes, T-Lymphocyte