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CCR10 expression is a common feature of circulating and mucosal epithelial tissue IgA Ab-secreting cells
Eric J. Kunkel, Chang H. Kim, Nicole H. Lazarus, Mark A. Vierra, Dulce Soler, Edward P. Bowman, Eugene C. Butcher
Eric J. Kunkel, Chang H. Kim, Nicole H. Lazarus, Mark A. Vierra, Dulce Soler, Edward P. Bowman, Eugene C. Butcher
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CCR10 expression is a common feature of circulating and mucosal epithelial tissue IgA Ab-secreting cells

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Abstract

The dissemination of IgA-dependent immunity between mucosal sites has important implications for mucosal immunoprotection and vaccine development. Epithelial cells in diverse gastrointestinal and nonintestinal mucosal tissues express the chemokine MEC/CCL28. Here we demonstrate that CCR10, a receptor for MEC, is selectively expressed by IgA Ab-secreting cells (large s/cIgA+CD38hiCD19int/–CD20–), including circulating IgA+ plasmablasts and almost all IgA+ plasma cells in the salivary gland, small intestine, large intestine, appendix, and tonsils. Few T cells in any mucosal tissue examined express CCR10. Moreover, tonsil IgA plasmablasts migrate to MEC, consistent with the selectivity of CCR10 expression. In contrast, CCR9, whose ligand TECK/CCL25 is predominantly restricted to the small intestine and thymus, is expressed by a fraction of IgA Ab-secreting cells and almost all T cells in the small intestine, but by only a small percentage of plasma cells and plasmablasts in other sites. These results point to a unifying role for CCR10 and its mucosal epithelial ligand MEC in the migration of circulating IgA plasmablasts and, together with other tissue-specific homing mechanisms, provides a mechanistic basis for the specific dissemination of IgA Ab-secreting cells after local immunization.

Authors

Eric J. Kunkel, Chang H. Kim, Nicole H. Lazarus, Mark A. Vierra, Dulce Soler, Edward P. Bowman, Eugene C. Butcher

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Figure 3

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CCR10 is expressed by mucosal tissue IgA plasma cells. Epithelial tissue...
CCR10 is expressed by mucosal tissue IgA plasma cells. Epithelial tissues known to be sites of IgA plasma cell localization were costained for CCR10 (red) and IgA1/2 (green; in a and b) or IgG (green; panel c). (a) The expression pattern of IgA on colon lymphocytes is identical to that of CCR10. Because CCR10 is surface expressed and IgA can be both on the surface and intracellular, the merged panel includes regions of yellow overlap as well as green and red areas. (b) Merged images of CCR10 and IgA staining from other tissues containing IgA plasma cells demonstrate that CCR10 colocalizes with IgA in all sites examined. Luminally transported secretory IgA can be seen in the lumens of the duodenum, jejunum, and appendix. Insets show negative control staining. (c) A small fraction of IgG PCs are present in mucosal tissues, but CCR10 did not colocalize well with these cells. Immunohistochemistry data is representative of three salivary gland, three stomach, five jejunum, three ileum, two duodenum, five colon, and three appendix samples.

Copyright © 2025 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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