Selective retention of activated CD8+ T cells by the normal liver

WZ Mehal, AE Juedes, IN Crispe - The Journal of Immunology, 1999 - journals.aai.org
WZ Mehal, AE Juedes, IN Crispe
The Journal of Immunology, 1999journals.aai.org
Activation-induced cell death resulting in peripheral deletion of CD8+ T cells is associated
with the accumulation of large numbers of apoptotic T cells in the liver. The hypothesis that
this accumulation results from the intrahepatic trapping of T cells from the circulating pool
predicts that the liver should retain T cells, which subsequently undergo apoptosis. Here we
test this prediction. Perfusion of the liver with lymphocyte mixtures showed retention of
activated, but neither resting nor apoptosing, T cells. This trapping was selective for CD8+ …
Abstract
Activation-induced cell death resulting in peripheral deletion of CD8+ T cells is associated with the accumulation of large numbers of apoptotic T cells in the liver. The hypothesis that this accumulation results from the intrahepatic trapping of T cells from the circulating pool predicts that the liver should retain T cells, which subsequently undergo apoptosis. Here we test this prediction. Perfusion of the liver with lymphocyte mixtures showed retention of activated, but neither resting nor apoptosing, T cells. This trapping was selective for CD8+ cells and was mediated primarily by ICAM-1 constitutively expressed on sinusoidal endothelial cells and Kupffer cells. T cells trapped in the liver became apoptotic. The normal liver is therefore a “sink” for activated T cells.
journals.aai.org