|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : CCR10 is important for the development of skin-specific gammadeltaT cells by regulating their migration and location.

First Author  Jin Y Year  2010
Journal  J Immunol Volume  185
Issue  10 Pages  5723-31
PubMed ID  20937851 Mgi Jnum  J:165323
Mgi Id  MGI:4837001 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.1001612
Citation  Jin Y, et al. (2010) CCR10 is important for the development of skin-specific gammadeltaT cells by regulating their migration and location. J Immunol 185(10):5723-31
abstractText  Unlike conventional alphabeta T cells, which preferentially reside in secondary lymphoid organs for adaptive immune responses, various subsets of unconventional T cells, such as the gammadelta T cells with innate properties, preferentially reside in epithelial tissues as the first line of defense. However, mechanisms underlying their tissue-specific development are not well understood. We report in this paper that among different thymic T cell subsets fetal thymic precursors of the prototypic skin intraepithelial Vgamma3(+) T lymphocytes (sIELs) were selected to display a unique pattern of homing molecules, including a high level of CCR10 expression that was important for their development into sIELs. In fetal CCR10-knockout mice, the Vgamma3(+) sIEL precursors developed normally in the thymus but were defective in migrating into the skin. Although the earlier defect in skin-seeding by sIEL precursors was partially compensated for by their normal expansion in the skin of adult CCR10-knockout mice, the Vgamma3(+) sIELs displayed abnormal morphology and increasingly accumulated in the dermal region of the skin. These findings provide definite evidence that CCR10 is important in sIEL development by regulating the migration of sIEL precursors and their maintenance in proper regions of the skin and support the notion that unique homing properties of different thymic T cell subsets play an important role in their peripheral location.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

5 Authors

3 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression