The small intestine epithelium (SI-Ep) harbors millions of unconventional (γδ and CD4(-) CD8(-) NK1.1(-) TCRαβ) and conventional (CD8αβ and CD4) T cells, designated intraepithelial lymphocytes (IELs). Here, we identified the circulating pool of SI-Ep-tropic T cells and studied their capacity to colonize the SI-Ep under steady-state conditions in SPF mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the absence of thymopoiesis, T lymphocytes are nevertheless present, mainly in the gut epithelium. Ontogeny of the extrathymic pathway and the extent of its involvement in euthymic mice are controversial. These questions have been addressed by assessing the expression of recombinase activating gene (RAG) through the use of green fluorescent protein RAG2 transgenic mouse models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCirculating leukocytes, particularly neutrophils and monocytes, are important effector cells in the induction of many forms of glomerulonephritis. Adhesion molecules, especially selectins, are also thought to be critical for the development of this disease. We examined the possible suppressive effect of soluble E-selectin on the development of experimental lupus nephritis induced by the injection of a hybridoma clone (2B11.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCD8alphabeta(+) and CD4(+) intraepithelial lymphocytes, the progeny of double-positive thymocytes, are oligoclonal T-cell populations that have accumulated in the gut wall as the result of repeated antigenic stimulations, which lead to rounds of traffic through the lymph/blood circuit ending in an alpha4beta7-integrin-driven homing all along the gut mucosa. In contrast, CD8alphaalpha(+) intraepithelial lymphocytes, which may be TCRgammadelta(+) or alphabeta(+), result in part from local differentiation in the gut, but studies comparing euthymic and athymic mice suggest a thymic double-negative origin for many of them.
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