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Publication : Soluble antigen traffics rapidly and selectively from the corneal surface to the eye draining lymph node and activates T cells when codelivered with CpG oligonucleotides.

First Author  Dang Z Year  2014
Journal  J Leukoc Biol Volume  95
Issue  3 Pages  431-40
PubMed ID  24295832 Mgi Jnum  J:211878
Mgi Id  MGI:5576835 Doi  10.1189/jlb.0612294
Citation  Dang Z, et al. (2014) Soluble antigen traffics rapidly and selectively from the corneal surface to the eye draining lymph node and activates T cells when codelivered with CpG oligonucleotides. J Leukoc Biol 95(3):431-40
abstractText  The transport of antigen to the secondary lymphoid tissue is a central component in the initiation of the adaptive immune response. The mechanism of antigen delivery to the DLN from the avascular cornea has not been fully explored. Previous studies in the mouse have shown that cell-associated corneal antigen is delivered within 6 h to the eye draining SM DLN via DCs and macrophages. In this study, we used a system in which antigen and the processed p-MHCII complexes derived from the antigen could be tracked in vivo. We report that soluble antigen applied to an abraded cornea in the mouse is transported rapidly (within 30 min) to the SM DLN, where a proportion is taken up by resident DCs and presented as p-MHCII complexes, while the larger part is cleared by 8 h. At a later time, a second wave of antigen transport in migratory DCs enters the DLN and participates in further continued antigen presentation. With the use of an antigen-specific TCR transgenic mouse system, we demonstrate that T cell activation does not occur during the early stages of soluble antigen delivery to LN, even though p-MHCII complexes are generated. Antigen-specific T cell activation occurs in the later, presumed cell-associated phase but requires codelivery of a "danger" signal, such as the TLR ligand CpG. We suggest that the early delivery of soluble antigen is more likely to induce T cell nonresponsiveness (anergy) unless presented in the context of an innate-immune cell activation (danger) signal.
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