High endothelial venules of the lymph nodes express Fas ligand

TS Kokkonen, MT Augustin… - … of Histochemistry & …, 2004 - journals.sagepub.com
TS Kokkonen, MT Augustin, JM Mäkinen, J Kokkonen, TJ Karttunen
Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry, 2004journals.sagepub.com
Fas (CD95, APO-1) is widely expressed on lymphatic cells, and by interacting with its natural
ligand (Fas-L), Fas induces apoptosis through a complex caspase cascade. In this study we
sought to survey Fas-L expression in vascular and sinusoidal structures of human reactive
lymph nodes. Immunohistochemical Fas-L expression was present in all paracortical high
endothelial venules (HEVs), in cells lining the marginal sinus wall, and in a few lymphocytes,
but only occasionally in non-HEV vascular endothelium. In the paracortical zone over 60 …
Fas (CD95, APO-1) is widely expressed on lymphatic cells, and by interacting with its natural ligand (Fas-L), Fas induces apoptosis through a complex caspase cascade. In this study we sought to survey Fas-L expression in vascular and sinusoidal structures of human reactive lymph nodes. Immunohistochemical Fas-L expression was present in all paracortical high endothelial venules (HEVs), in cells lining the marginal sinus wall, and in a few lymphocytes, but only occasionally in non-HEV vascular endothelium. In the paracortical zone over 60% of all vessels and all paracortical HEVs showed Fas-L expression, whereas in the medullary zone less than 10% of the blood vessels were stained with Fas-L. Normal vessels outside lymph nodes mostly showed no Fas-L expression. We show that in human reactive lymph nodes Fas-L expression is predominantly present in HEVs. Because the circulating lymphocytes gain entry to nodal parenchyma by transendothelial migration through HEVs, the suggested physiological importance of Fas-L expression in these vessels lies in the regulation of lymphocyte access to lymph node parencyhyma by possibly inducing Fas/Fas-L mediated apoptosis of activated Fas-expressing lymphoid cells. The Fas-L expressing cells in the marginal sinus might have a similar function for cells accessing the node in afferent lymph.
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