4.7 Review

Reverse transendothelial cell migration in inflammation: to help or to hinder?

Journal

CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR LIFE SCIENCES
Volume 74, Issue 10, Pages 1871-1881

Publisher

SPRINGER BASEL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s00018-016-2444-2

Keywords

Reverse migration; rTEM; Reverse interstitial migration; Intravasation; Transmigration; Endothelial cell; Neutrophil; T cell; Monocyte

Funding

  1. Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada (MSSC)

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The endothelium provides a strong barrier separating circulating blood from tissue. It also provides a significant challenge for immune cells in the bloodstream to access potential sites of infection. To mount an effective immune response, leukocytes traverse the endothelial layer in a process known as transendothelial migration. Decades of work have allowed dissection of the mechanisms through which immune cells gain access into peripheral tissues, and subsequently to inflammatory foci. However, an often under-appreciated or potentially ignored question is whether transmigrated leukocytes can leave these inflammatory sites, and perhaps even return across the endothelium and re-enter circulation. Although evidence has existed to support reverse transendothelial migration for a number of years, it is only recently that mechanisms associated with this process have been described. Here we review the evidence that supports both reverse transendothelial migration and reverse interstitial migration within tissues, with particular emphasis on some of the more recent studies that finally hint at potential mechanisms. Additionally, we postulate the biological significance of retrograde migration, and whether it serves as an additional mechanism to limit pathology, or provides a basis for the dissemination of systemic inflammation.

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