4.6 Review

Curriculum vitae of intestinal intraepithelial T cells:: their developmental and behavioral characteristics

Journal

IMMUNOLOGICAL REVIEWS
Volume 215, Issue -, Pages 154-165

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-065X.2006.00473.x

Keywords

CD8 alpha alpha(+)-IEL; gamma delta-IEL; alpha beta-IEL; extrathymic development of IEL; cryptopatches

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The alimentary tract has an epithelial layer, consisting mainly of intestinal epithelial cells (IECs), that is exposed to the exterior world through the intestinal lumen. The IEC layer contains many intestinal intraepithelial T cells (IELs), and the total number of IELs constitutes the largest population in the peripheral T-cell pool. Virtually all gamma delta-IELs and many alpha beta-IELs in the mouse small intestine are known to express CD8 alpha alpha homodimers. A wide range of evidence that supports extrathymic development of these CD8 alpha alpha(+) IELs has been collected. In addition, while several studies identified cells with precursor T-cell phenotypes within the gut epithelium, how these precursors, which are dispersed along the length of the intestine, develop into gamma delta-IELs and/or alpha beta-IELs has not been clarified. The identification of lymphoid cell aggregations named 'cryptopatches' (CPs) in the intestinal crypt lamina propria of mice as sites rich in T-cell precursors in 1996 by our research group, however, provided evidence for a central site, whereby precursor IELs could give rise to T-cell receptor-bearing IELs. In this review, we discuss the development of IELs in the intestinal mucosa and examine the possibility that CPs serve as a production site of extrathymic IELs.

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