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Publication : L-selectin-dependent lymphoid occupancy is required to induce alloantigen-specific tolerance.

First Author  Bai Y Year  2002
Journal  J Immunol Volume  168
Issue  4 Pages  1579-89
PubMed ID  11823485 Mgi Jnum  J:74461
Mgi Id  MGI:2158515 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.168.4.1579
Citation  Bai Y, et al. (2002) L-selectin-dependent lymphoid occupancy is required to induce alloantigen-specific tolerance. J Immunol 168(4):1579-89
abstractText  Maneuvers that interfere with signals 1, 2, 3, or Ag processing can result in indefinite allograft survival. However, they are not applicable to all tissues, strains, or species, suggesting that there are additional levels of immune regulation. We hypothesized that secondary lymphoid organs are important for interactions among lymphocytes, alloantigen, and immunosuppressants that lead to tolerance. To explore this, cardiac allografts were performed with a tolerogenic immunosuppressive regimen. Concurrent administration of anti-L-selectin (CD62L) Ab, which prevents lymph node homing, prevents indefinite allograft survival and tolerance. Anti-CD62L Ab is not costimulatory, and Fab and F(ab')(2) anti-CD62L have similar activities. Flow cytometry and histologic examination show that Ab shifts T cells away from lymph nodes and into spleen, peripheral blood, and graft. Tolerance is not induced in CD62L(-/-) mice, and adoptive transfer of CD62L(-/-), but not CD62L(+/+), T cells prevents tolerization in wild-type recipients. FTY720, an immunosuppressant that promotes chemokine-dependent, but CD62L-independent, lymph node homing, reverses the Ab effect. Blockade of other homing receptors also prevents tolerization. These results indicate that T lymphocytes use CD62L-dependent migration for alloantigen-specific tolerance, and suggest that lymph nodes or other lymphoid tissues are an important site for peripheral tolerization to alloantigen.
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