|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : A spatially-organized multicellular innate immune response in lymph nodes limits systemic pathogen spread.

First Author  Kastenmüller W Year  2012
Journal  Cell Volume  150
Issue  6 Pages  1235-48
PubMed ID  22980983 Mgi Jnum  J:187962
Mgi Id  MGI:5438845 Doi  10.1016/j.cell.2012.07.021
Citation  Kastenmuller W, et al. (2012) A spatially-organized multicellular innate immune response in lymph nodes limits systemic pathogen spread. Cell 150(6):1235-48
abstractText  The lymphatic network that transports interstitial fluid and antigens to lymph nodes constitutes a conduit system that can be hijacked by invading pathogens to achieve systemic spread unless dissemination is blocked in the lymph node itself. Here, we show that a network of diverse lymphoid cells (natural killer cells, gammadelta T cells, natural killer T cells, and innate-like CD8+ T cells) are spatially prepositioned close to lymphatic sinus-lining sentinel macrophages where they can rapidly and efficiently receive inflammasome-generated IL-18 and additional cytokine signals from the pathogen-sensing phagocytes. This leads to rapid IFNgamma secretion by the strategically positioned innate lymphocytes, fostering antimicrobial resistance in the macrophage population. Interference with this innate immune response loop allows systemic spread of lymph-borne bacteria. These findings extend our understanding of the functional significance of cellular positioning and local intercellular communication within lymph nodes while emphasizing the role of these organs as highly active locations of innate host defense. PAPERCLIP:
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

35 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression