T cells use two directionally distinct pathways for cytokine secretion

M Huse, BF Lillemeier, MS Kuhns, DS Chen… - Nature …, 2006 - nature.com
M Huse, BF Lillemeier, MS Kuhns, DS Chen, MM Davis
Nature immunology, 2006nature.com
Activated T helper cells produce many cytokines, some of which are secreted through the
immunological synapse toward the antigen-presenting cell. Here we have used
immunocytochemistry, live-cell imaging and a surface-mediated secretion assay to show
that there are two cytokine export pathways in T helper cells. Some cytokines, including
interleukin 2 and interferon-γ, were secreted into the synapse, whereas others, including
tumor necrosis factor and the chemokine CCL3 (MIP-1α), were released multidirectionally …
Abstract
Activated T helper cells produce many cytokines, some of which are secreted through the immunological synapse toward the antigen-presenting cell. Here we have used immunocytochemistry, live-cell imaging and a surface-mediated secretion assay to show that there are two cytokine export pathways in T helper cells. Some cytokines, including interleukin 2 and interferon-γ, were secreted into the synapse, whereas others, including tumor necrosis factor and the chemokine CCL3 (MIP-1α), were released multidirectionally. Each secretion pathway was associated with different trafficking proteins, indicating that they are molecularly distinct processes. These data suggest that T helper cells release some cytokines into the immunological synapse to impart specific communication and others multidirectionally to promote inflammation and to establish chemokine gradients.
nature.com