[HTML][HTML] Preferential migration of effector CD8+ T cells into the interstitium of the normal lung

E Galkina, J Thatte, V Dabak… - The Journal of …, 2005 - Am Soc Clin Investig
E Galkina, J Thatte, V Dabak, MB Williams, K Ley, TJ Braciale
The Journal of clinical investigation, 2005Am Soc Clin Investig
The respiratory tract is a primary site of infection and exposure to environmental antigens
and an important site of memory T cell localization. We analyzed the migration and retention
of naive and activated CD8+ T cells within the noninflamed lungs and quantitated the
partitioning of adoptively transferred T cells between the pulmonary vascular and interstitial
compartments. Activated but not naive T cells were retained within the lungs for a prolonged
period. Effector CD8+ T cells preferentially egressed from the pulmonary vascular …
The respiratory tract is a primary site of infection and exposure to environmental antigens and an important site of memory T cell localization. We analyzed the migration and retention of naive and activated CD8+ T cells within the noninflamed lungs and quantitated the partitioning of adoptively transferred T cells between the pulmonary vascular and interstitial compartments. Activated but not naive T cells were retained within the lungs for a prolonged period. Effector CD8+ T cells preferentially egressed from the pulmonary vascular compartment into the noninflamed pulmonary interstitium. T cell retention within the lung vasculature was leukocyte function antigen-1 dependent, while the egress of effector T cells from the vascular to the interstitium functions through a pertussis toxin–sensitive (PTX-sensitive) mechanism driven in part by constitutive CC chemokine ligand 5 expression in the lungs. These results document a novel mechanism of adhesion receptor– and pulmonary chemokine–dependent regulation of the migration of activated CD8+ T cells into an important nonlymphoid peripheral site (i.e., the normal/noninflamed lung).
The Journal of Clinical Investigation