4.7 Article

Stromal mesenteric lymph node cells are essential for the generation of gut-homing T cells in vivo

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE
Volume 205, Issue 11, Pages 2483-2490

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1084/jem.20080039

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SFB621-A1, SFB621-A11]

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T cells primed in the gut-draining mesenteric lymph nodes (mLN) are imprinted to express alpha 4 beta 7-integrin and chemokine receptor CCR9, thereby enabling lymphocytes to migrate to the small intestine. In vitro activation by intestinal dendritic cells ( DC) or addition of retinoic acid ( RA) is sufficient to instruct expression of these gut-homing molecules. We report that in vivo stroma cells, but not DC, allow the mLN to induce the generation of gut tropism. Peripheral LN (pLN) transplanted into the gut mesenteries fail to support the generation of gut-homing T cells, even though gut-derived DC enter the transplants and prime T cells. DC that fail to induce alpha 4 beta 7-integrin and CCR9 in vitro readily induce these factors in vivo upon injection into mLN afferent lymphatics. Moreover, uniquely mesenteric but not pLN stroma cells express high levels of RA-producing enzymes and support induction of CCR9 on activated T cells in vitro. These results demonstrate a hitherto unrecognized contribution of stromal cell delivered signals, including RA, on the imprinting of tissue tropism in vivo.

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