Circulating Activated Platelets Reconstitute Lymphocyte Homing and Immunity in L-selectin–Deficient Mice |
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Authors: | Thomas G. Diacovo Michelle D. Catalina Mark H. Siegelman Ulrich H. von Andrian |
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Affiliation: | From *The Center for Blood Research, the ‡Department of Cardiology, and the §Department of Pathology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115; the ‖Division of Newborn Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts 02111; and the ¶Department of Pathology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75235-9069 |
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Abstract: | Peripheral lymph nodes (PLN) are critical for immunologic memory formation in response to antigens that penetrate the skin. Blood-borne lymphocytes first encounter such antigens after they home to PLN through a multi-step adhesion process that is normally initiated by L-selectin (CD62L) in high endothelial venules (HEV). Since naive T cells can not enter PLN normally in L-selectin–deficient mice, a delayed type hypersensitivity response to cutaneously applied antigen cannot be mounted. In this study, we report that the administration of activated platelets into the systemic circulation of L-selectin knockout mice restores lymphocyte trafficking to PLN, and reconstitutes T cell–mediated immunity in response to a cutaneous antigen. These effects required platelet-expressed P-selectin that allows activated platelets to transiently form a bridge between lymphocytes and HEV, thereby enabling lymphocytes to undergo subsequent β2 integrin-dependent firm adhesion. These profound effects of platelet-mediated cell–cell interactions on lymphocyte trafficking and formation of immunologic memory may impact on a variety of autoimmune and inflammatory conditions. |
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