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Original Article |
cyster{at}itsa.ucsf.edu
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Key Words: chemokine CXCR5 ELC follicle T lymphocyte
Tcell–dependent antibody responses require cognate interaction between antigen-presenting B cells and antigen-specific T cells 12. Antigen-mediated cross-linking of the B cell receptor promotes B cell localization at the boundary between T zone and follicles (for a review, see reference 3), the location of the earliest encounters between antigen-bearing B cells and antigen-specific T cells 456. After receiving signals from activated CD4 T cells, some B cells undergo differentiation into plasmablasts, which migrate to the red pulp of spleen or medullary cords of LNs and become antibody-secreting plasma cells. Other activated B cells move into the follicle and form a germinal center (GC)1 1. The GC is strongly dependent on help from antigen-specific T cells that must migrate into the follicle to support this response 789101112. Movement of antigen-specific T cells has been studied within lymphoid tissues using an adoptive T cell transfer model 13. When recipients of OVA-specific TCR-transgenic CD4+ T cells are immunized with OVA in adjuvant, there is a short period of transgenic T cell proliferation in the T zone, and then large numbers of these cells are induced to migrate into follicles 13. T cell migration to follicles has also been studied in nontransgenic mice during the response to pigeon cytochrome c (PCC [7, 9, 14]). The predominant responding T cell population expresses TCR containing V
The understanding of how antigen-specific T cells migrate to follicles is poorly developed. Recently, several chemokines have been characterized that are constitutively expressed in lymphoid tissues and help direct the movements of resting and activated lymphocytes. B lymphocyte chemoattractant (BLC [18]; also called B cell–attracting chemokine 1 [BCA-1; 19]) is a CXC chemokine made by stromal cells in lymphoid follicles that functions as a ligand for CXC chemokine receptor 5 (CXCR5, previously called Burkitt's lymphoma receptor [BLR1]) 20. Gene knockout studies have established that CXCR5 is required for B cell homing to follicles in spleen and Peyer's patches 21. In vitro, BLC was shown to be an efficacious attractant of B cells while attracting few T cells and no myeloid cells 1819. Two CC chemokines, secondary lymphoid tissue chemokine (SLC, also called 6-Ckine) and EBV-induced molecule 1 (EBI-1) ligand chemokine (ELC, also called macrophage inflammatory protein [MIP]-3β), are constitutively expressed by cells in the T zone 2223. SLC and ELC are ligands for CC chemokine receptor 7 and both strongly attract resting and in vitro–activated T cells 222324252627282930. Mice that lack SLC expression (and have reduced ELC expression) have defective homing of T cells into LNs and splenic T cell areas 31.
Previous studies have shown that while most T cells are negative for CXCR5, a subset of memory phenotype cells are CXCR5+ 2021. Here we have investigated the relationship between acquisition of CXCR5 expression by CD4 T cells and homing to lymphoid follicles. We establish that CXCR5 upregulation and acquisition of BLC responsiveness of in vivo–activated CD4 T cells occur with a time course consistent with a role in directing T cells to follicles. We also establish that at the same time as upregulating CXCR5, in vivo–activated CD4 T cells downregulate their response to ELC and SLC. Finally, we demonstrate that CD4–CD8– double negative (DN) T cells from MRL-lpr mice express CXCR5 and, upon transfer to normal recipients, migrate to follicle proximal locations in all secondary lymphoid tissues, establishing that T cells can acquire the intrinsic ability to migrate to B cell follicles.
Chemokines.
DO11.10 T Cell Adoptive Transfer, OVA Immunization, and Recipient Analysis.
PCC Immunization and Flow Cytometry.
Chemotaxis Assays.
MRL-lpr DN T Cell and Aged B6 CXCR5hi T Cell Adoptive Transfers.
Immunohistochemistry, Immunofluorescence Microscopy, and In Situ Hybridization.
11 and Vβ3 1516. When mice are immunized with PCC in adjuvant, a protocol that induces a strong GC response, V
11Vβ3-expressing T cells are found to begin localizing in follicles by day 5 and to peak in number at day 10, with many of the cells at this time being resident in GCs 79101417. In contrast to these findings, when mice are given antigen in saline intravenously, T cells become activated but fail to migrate into follicles. Many of the cells are quickly eliminated, and those that remain respond poorly to subsequent antigen exposure 13. Therefore, CD4 T cell migration into follicles has been suggested to be important for supporting not only B cell responses, but also a fully developed T cell response and induction of T cell memory.
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Materials and Methods
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Abstract
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Mice.
Six 10-wk-old Balb/cAnN mice were obtained from Charles River Laboratories. C57BL/6 (B6), MRL/MpJ (MRL), and MRL/Mp-lpr/lpr (MRL-lpr) mice were from The Jackson Laboratory. DO11.10 TCR-transgenic mice 32 on the Balb/c background, and aged and control B6 mice for memory T cell analysis were maintained in the University of California at San Francisco animal care facility. Eight 10-wk-old, specific pathogen-free, male B10.BR mice (The Jackson Laboratory) were housed under barrier conditions at the Duke University Vivarium.
HIS6-tagged murine BLC was prepared by PCR-based insertion of six histidine codons preceding the BLC stop codon. The BLC-his6 construct was inserted into the CMV-based mammalian expression vector pRK5 33 and stably transfected into HEK-293 cells using the Lipotaxi Mammalian Transfection kit (Stratagene) according to the manufacturer's instructions. HIS6-BLC was purified from tissue culture supernatants using an NiNTA column (Qiagen). The protein was eluted in 100 µM imidazole (Fisher Scientific Co.). SDS-PAGE separation of the eluate revealed a band representing >90% of total protein corresponding to the recombinant HIS6-BLC. HIS6-ELC was produced in bacteria and purified as described 23. A similarly constructed vector for bacterial HIS6-SLC production was a gift from M. Gunn (Duke University, Durham, NC). Stromal cell–derived factor (SDF)1
(N33A) produced by chemical ligation (Gryphon Sciences), HIS6-BLC, -ELC, and -SLC were used in all chemotaxis assays, except for MRL-lpr chemotaxis where, due to availability at the time of the experiments, non–HIS-tagged murine SLC (gift of M. Gunn) and human ELC (R&D Systems) were used. We have not observed significant differences in the response of mouse cells to mouse or human ELC.
Adoptive transfer and immunization of recipients were carried out essentially as described 13. Lymphocytes were isolated from LNs or spleen of DO11.10 donor mice, and the percentage of OVA323–339 peptide/I-Ad–specific CD4+ T cells was determined by flow cytometric analysis of an aliquot of cells stained with FITC-conjugated clonotypic mAb KJ1-26 and anti-CD4–PE (Caltag). 2.5 x 106 KJ1-26+CD4+ cells were adoptively transferred into sex-matched Balb/c recipients by intravenous injection. The day after cell transfer, mice were immunized with 300 µg OVA323–339 peptide either emulsified in CFA (Sigma Chemical Co.) and injected subcutaneously in a total volume of 0.1 ml distributed over three points on the back, or in sterile PBS by intravenous injection. Recipients were killed and dissected 2, 3, 5, 7, 10, 14, or 25 d after immunization. In a second immunization protocol 34, mice were injected subcutaneously with 2 mg OVA protein (Sigma Chemical Co.) mixed in 0.2 ml of 250 µg/ml LPS (Sigma Chemical Co.). For subcutaneously injected mice, lymphocytes were isolated from axillary and brachial LNs. For intravenously injected mice, cells from mandibular, cervical, axillary, brachial, inguinal, and in some cases mesenteric nodes were pooled. The remaining peripheral LNs were frozen in OCT (Miles, Inc.) for sectioning. Flow cytometric analysis was performed using affinity-purified anti-CXCR5 rabbit antiserum 35, followed by biotinylated goat anti–rabbit IgG (PharMingen) with normal mouse and rat serum (1:100 dilution), and then streptavidin-Cychrome (PharMingen), KJ1-26–FITC, anti-B220–PE, and anti-CD8–PE (Caltag).
Whole PCC (Sigma Chemical Co.) was diluted into PBS and mixed with the Ribi adjuvant system (RAS; Ribi Immunochem Research). B10.BR mice were immunized with 400 µg of PCC in 200 µl of adjuvant emulsion in two 100-µl doses by subcutaneous injection on either side of the base of the tail. Animals were killed at 3, 5, 7, and 9 d after immunization, and the draining LNs were harvested as described previously 17. In brief, inguinal and periaortic nodes were collected, and using 0.17 M NH4Cl solution for erythrocyte lysis were made into single cell suspensions. Cells were incubated with anti-CXCR5 rabbit antiserum, followed by anti–rabbit IgG-biotin (Santa Cruz Biotechnology). After blocking with normal rabbit and mouse serum (1:100 dilution) for 5 min, staining was completed using streptavidin-PE (PharMingen), anti-V
11–FITC (PharMingen), anti-Vβ3–allophycocyanin, anti-B220–Cy5PE (PharMingen), anti-CD8–Cy5PE (PharMingen), anti-CD11b–Cy5PE (Caltag), and anti-CD44–Texas red. Finally, cells were resuspended in 2 µg/ml propidium iodide (for dead cell exclusion) in PBS with 5% FCS. The cells were analyzed using a dual laser modified FACStarPLUSTM (Becton Dickinson Immunocytometry Systems; an argon laser as the primary, a tunable dye laser as the secondary) capable of seven-parameter collection. Files were acquired using CELLQuestTM software (Becton Dickinson) and analyzed using FlowJo software (Tree Star, Inc.).
Chemotaxis assays were performed as described 23 using 106 total cells per 5-µm transwell (Corning Costar Corp.). To identify migrating populations, a fraction of transmigrated cells was stained and analyzed by flow cytometry. Transmigrated LN cells from Balb/c recipients of OVA-specific T cells were stained with KJ1-26–FITC and anti-CD4–TriColor (Caltag), or with anti-CD4–PE (Caltag) and KJ1-26–biotin followed by streptavidin-Cychrome (PharMingen). Because BLC causes reversible internalization of CXCR5 36, transmigrated splenocytes from aged B6 mice were washed twice and incubated in RPMI plus 0.5% BSA for 1 h at 37°C, 5% CO2 to allow CXCR5 reexpression before staining with anti-CXCR5 rabbit antiserum/goat anti–rabbit IgG-biotin/streptavidin-Cychrome, anti-CD4–FITC (Caltag), and anti-CD62L–PE (PharMingen). LN suspensions from 5–8-mo-old MRL-lpr mice were stained with anti-B220–PE, anti-Thy1.2–biotin (Caltag), and anti-CXCR5 rabbit antiserum followed by goat anti–rabbit IgG-FITC (Caltag) and streptavidin-Cychrome. To provide an internal control, MRL-lpr splenocytes (70% Thy1+B220+, 9% Thy1+B220–) were mixed 3:1 with B6 splenocytes (<1% Thy1+B220+, 27% Thy1+B220–) for chemotaxis assays. Transmigrated cells were stained with anti-Thy1.2–FITC (Caltag), anti-B220–PE, and anti-CD21–biotin/streptavidin-Cychrome.
DN T cells were purified from LNs of 5–8-mo-old MRL-lpr mice. Total LN cells were incubated with biotinylated mAbs against CD22 (PharMingen), CD4, and CD8 (Caltag) followed by streptavidin-coated magnetic beads, and then passed over a MACS® column (Miltenyi Biotec). Memory phenotype splenocytes from 14-mo-old mice were enriched by MACS® depletion with biotinylated mAbs against CD8, B220, and CD11b (Caltag). For all transfers, 2 x 107 cells were labeled with 5- (and 6-)carboxyfluorescein succinimidyl ester (CFSE; Molecular Probes) as described 35 and transferred by intravenous injection into appropriate syngeneic (MRL or B6) recipients. After
24 h, recipients were killed, and spleen, LNs, and Peyer's patches were frozen in OCT for sectioning.
For immunohistochemistry, cryostat sections (7–8 µm) were fixed and stained as described previously 35 with the following reagents: biotinylated or FITC-conjugated KJ1-26, rat anti-CD4 and anti-CD8 (Caltag), and biotinylated peanut agglutinin (PNA; Sigma Chemical Co.). Biotinylated reagents were detected with avidin–alkaline phosphatase (Sigma Chemical Co.), rat mAbs with horseradish peroxidase–conjugated goat anti–rat IgG (Southern Biotechnology Associates), and KJ1-26–FITC with horseradish peroxidase–conjugated antifluorescein (NEN). Enzyme reactions were developed with conventional substrates for peroxidases (diaminobenzidine/H2O2; Sigma Chemical Co.) and alkaline phosphatase (Fast Red/Naphthol AS-MX; Sigma Chemical Co.). Endogenous alkaline phosphatase activity was blocked with levamisole (Sigma Chemical Co.). Some sections were counterstained with hematoxylin (Fisher Scientific Co.). Sections were mounted in crystal mount (Biomeda Corp.). For immunofluorescence microscopy, unfixed sections were air-dried and incubated with biotinylated mAbs against CD8, CD4, or Thy1.2 (Caltag) and CD3
(PharMingen) followed by streptavidin-Cy3 (Jackson ImmunoResearch Labs). Three-color staining of spleen sections was achieved by costaining with rat anti–MOMA-1 37 followed by goat anti–rat IgG-aminomethylcoumarin (Jackson ImmunoResearch Labs). Sections were mounted in Fluoromount G (Southern Biotechnology Associates), viewed, and photographed as described 35. In situ hybridization analysis was performed as described 23 using a BLC probe spanning nucleotides 27–1042 of mouse BLC 18.
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Results
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Abstract
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Immunization Conditions that Promote Antigen-specific CD4 T Cell Homing to Follicles Cause Rapid Upregulation of CXCR5 Expression.
Mice that had received an inoculum of OVA-specific TCR-transgenic (DO11.10) T cells were injected with OVA323–339 peptide either subcutaneously in CFA to promote T cell trafficking to follicles, or intravenously in PBS to promote transient T cell activation without migration to follicles 13. At days 2, 3, 5, and 10 after immunization, LNs were isolated and analyzed by flow cytometry with a clonotypic antibody, KJ1-26, that recognizes the transferred OVA-specific T cells, and with an antiserum specific for CXCR5 3536. Before immunization, transferred OVA-specific T cells were uniformly CXCR5lo/– (Fig. 1 A). However, within 2 d of immunization with peptide in CFA, when OVA-specific T cell numbers in the draining LNs start to increase 13, a subpopulation of CXCR5+ cells could be identified (Fig. 1 B). By day 3, when the OVA-specific T cell frequency had increased
30-fold, as in previous studies 13, most of the antigen-specific cells expressed high levels of CXCR5 (fluorescence intensity at least 10-fold greater than the staining control), and after 5 d the cells were uniformly CXCR5hi (Fig. 1C and Fig. D). Appearance of T cells in follicles followed similar kinetics to the CXCR5 upregulation (Fig. 2). Consistent with previous reports 1334, KJ1-26+ OVA-specific T cells began appearing in follicles by day 3 after immunization (Fig. 2 A) and reached maximal numbers by day 5 (Fig. 2 B). An enlargement of draining LN B cell areas occurred over this time period, and by day 5 many of the follicles contained nascent GCs (Fig. 2 B). Immunization of mice with OVA protein in LPS, a protocol that has been shown to promote T cell trafficking to follicles 34, also led to increased expression of CXCR5 on CD4 T cells (Fig. 1 F). In contrast to these effects, intravenous injection of OVA peptide in saline led to only weak induction of CXCR5 on OVA-specific T cells in LNs (Fig. 1A–E) and spleen (data not shown), and did not promote KJ1-26+ T cell migration into follicles (Fig. 2 C). When mice immunized with OVA peptide in CFA were followed for longer times, a decline in CXCR5 expression was found to occur, although a significant proportion of KJ1-26+ cells remained CXCR5hi at day 10 after immunization (Fig. 1 E), and CXCR5hi cells could still be detected at day 25 (data not shown). By day 10, many B cell areas had become secondary follicles, comprising a well-developed GC and a surrounding mantle of small resting B cells (Fig. 2 D). Significant numbers of KJ1-26+ T cells were detectable in the secondary follicles, with many residing in the mantle zone and smaller numbers being associated with the outer zone of GCs (Fig. 2 D). BLC in situ hybridization analysis of LNs containing well-developed GCs showed that BLC was highly expressed in the follicular mantle zones (Fig. 2E and Fig. F). Within GCs, only occasional cells could be identified that hybridized with the BLC probe, and these cells tended to be most frequent in the area of the GC distal to the T zone (Fig. 2E and Fig. F). This is also the region of the GC most enriched for CD4 T cells (1; Fig. 2 D).
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11Vβ3-expressing Cells during the PCC Response.
11Vβ3-expressing CD4 T cells was followed in mice immunized subcutaneously with PCC protein in adjuvant. V
11Vβ3-expressing T cells responding to PCC were detected in immunized, but not unimmunized, animals by upregulation of CD44 (Fig. 3 A). CXCR5 expression became detectable on a subset of PCC-responsive V
11+Vβ3+ T cells by day 3 after immunization (Fig. 3 A). This subpopulation grew in frequency through day 9 (Fig. 3 B), reaching maximal total numbers by day 7 (Fig. 3 C). These kinetics of CXCR5 expression are in close accord with the kinetics of V
11Vβ3-expressing T cell accumulation in follicular mantle zones and GCs during the response to PCC 917. A subpopulation of the responding CD44+ V
11Vβ3-expressing T cells did not upregulate CXCR5 (Fig. 3). Such bimodality was not observed in the response of the monoclonal DO11.10 T cells to OVA peptide (Fig. 1 D) and may indicate that T cells with differing affinity for peptide/MHC differ in their propensity to upregulate CXCR5.
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1 yr) mice were characterized as a source of memory phenotype T cells, and a great majority of the L-selectinlo CD4 T cells from these animals were found to express CXCR5 (Fig. 4 D). In addition to low L-selectin expression, the majority of CXCR5hi T cells in young and old mice expressed high levels of CD44 and reduced amounts of CD45RB (data not shown). Most of the CXCR5hi cells were also negative for the activation markers CD69 and CD25, further supporting their designation as memory cells. Interestingly, though a significant proportion of memory phenotype T cells in young mice expresses CXCR5, this proportion was consistently increased in aged mice (Fig. 4 D). In in vitro chemotaxis assays, the CXCR5hi memory T cells showed a very similar dose-sensitive BLC response to the activated OVA-specific T cells characterized above (Fig. 4 E). These results establish that both resting and activated CXCR5hi T cells respond to BLC. Interestingly, although the magnitude of the T cell response to BLC was lower than that observed for B cells, the T cells responded maximally to lower concentrations of BLC than did B cells (Fig. 4 E). This finding is similar to that made previously with transfected Jurkat T cells 18, suggesting that T cells are intrinsically more sensitive than recirculating B cells to CXCR5 signaling. CD4 T cells express severalfold less surface CXCR5 than B cells (Fig. 1), demonstrating that higher surface chemokine receptor expression does not equate to higher chemokine sensitivity.
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In the adoptive transfer studies of Jenkins and co-workers, it was observed that antigen needed to be injected in adjuvant for activated T cells to migrate to follicles 1334. When antigen was injected in the absence of adjuvant, T cell activation was transient and the activated cells failed to home to follicles. Our results provide a basis for understanding the different trafficking patterns of the activated cells as they show that CXCR5 upregulation and acquisition of BLC responsiveness only occurs after injection of antigen in adjuvant. Many studies have indicated that the effectiveness of adjuvants is through their potent activation of dendritic cells (DCs 41), and it is therefore reasonable to suggest that effective induction of CXCR5 expression on T cells requires interaction with appropriately activated antigen-presenting DCs within the lymphoid tissue. OX40L is expressed by a subset of activated DCs 42, and recent studies by Lane and co-workers provide evidence that stimulation of T cells through OX40 can promote upregulation of CXCR5 43 and homing of T cells to follicles 44. Further studies are needed to define whether additional costimulatory molecules can regulate CXCR5 expression on T cells.
In vivo activation by antigen in adjuvant decreases T cell responsiveness to ELC and SLC at the same time as increasing responsiveness to BLC. This contrasts with findings in vitro, where PHA- and IL-2–activated T cells responded more strongly than unactivated cells to SLC and ELC 282930 and again indicates that the mode of T cell activation can strongly influence chemokine responsiveness. Recently, it has been shown that plt/plt mice, which exhibit defective homing of T cells to splenic T zones and LNs 45, have a compound defect that causes a deficiency in SLC expression and markedly reduced ELC expression 31. This finding provided strong evidence that SLC and ELC are needed for T cell homing to lymphoid T cell areas. Therefore, reduced responsiveness of CXCR5hi T cells to ELC and SLC may allow the cells to more readily leave the T zone and enter follicles. Reciprocally, the failure of T cells activated after intravenous injection of antigen to downregulate their SLC and ELC response might contribute to their inability to migrate to follicles. Since SLC appears important for cells to enter LNs via high endothelial venules or lymphatics 223146, decreased responsiveness to this chemokine is also likely to influence the recirculation pattern of the cells.
Our studies provide strong evidence that altered responsiveness to constitutively expressed chemokines is part of the mechanism by which antigen-activated CD4 T cells migrate towards and into B cell follicles. This conclusion is also supported by the transfer experiments showing that DN T cells from MRL-lpr mice are intrinsically capable of migrating to areas proximal to follicles (Fig. 6). However, the failure of CXCR5hi CD4 T cells to migrate to follicles after adoptive transfer suggests that additional factors might normally help guide antigen-activated CD4 T cells. The migration of only a subset of OVA-activated T cells to follicles also suggests that CXCR5hi cells may be heterogeneous in their responsiveness to these factors. Several studies have shown that B cell receptor–stimulated B cells upregulate expression of chemokines, including MIP-1
, MIP-1β 4748, and macrophage-derived chemokine (MDC 49), that can attract subsets of activated T cells 50515253. Since antigen-activated B cells move to the boundary of B and T zones 3, it is likely that chemokines produced by activated B cells work together with constitutively expressed chemokines to bring antigen-activated T cells to the outer T zone. Whether further cues are needed to direct cells from the outer T zone into follicles remains unclear, although the failure of MRL-lpr DN T cells to migrate to the inner regions of follicles suggests this is the case. Possibilities include changes in the responsiveness of the T cells to other unknown chemokines, and changes in the relative adhesiveness of the cells for features of the B or T cell compartments. Several examples of cell sorting occurring as a result of differential adhesiveness of cells have been reported 545556.
A major role of T cells inside follicles is to support the GC response 12. 9 d after immunization with PCC in adjuvant, a large majority of the PCC-responsive V
11Vβ3-expressing T cells express CXCR5 (Fig. 3), and at this time point,
75% of the cells are localized within GCs 17. Therefore, at least a subset of PCC-responsive CXCR5hi T cells acquires the ability to enter GCs. Similarly, in the DO11.10 adoptive transfer system, 10 d after immunization with OVA peptide in CFA, the majority of KJ1-26+ T cells were CXCR5hi, and many cells were found in follicular mantle zones and GCs (Fig. 2 D). The strong expression of BLC in primary follicles 18 and in follicular mantle zones of secondary follicles (Fig. 2E and Fig. F) is consistent with BLC playing a role in attracting T cells to these sites. The presence of only small numbers of BLC-expressing cells within GCs, predominantly in the region distal to the T zone (most likely corresponding to the GC light zone [1]) suggests that while BLC/CXCR5 might have a role in helping position cells within GCs, additional cues are likely to be needed. These findings also establish that there is substantial heterogeneity among follicular stromal cells in terms of BLC expression levels, with GC follicular DCs expressing relatively little of this chemokine. Perhaps by being concentrated predominantly outside the T zone–distal pole of the GC, BLC helps polarize the GC light and dark zone compartments. The notion that cues other than BLC play important roles in GC organization is supported by the finding that GCs are able to form in CXCR5-deficient mice 21. Furthermore, although spleens of CXCR5-deficient mice lack polarized follicles and contain aberrantly located GCs, the follicular disruption in LNs appeared to be minimal 21. Although this suggests that the role of CXCR5/BLC in B and T cell homing to LN follicles is redundant to other chemokine/receptor systems, studies in mice lacking lymphotoxin or TNF have shown that effects on follicular organization in LNs are more difficult to detect than in spleen or Peyer's patches 5758, yet these effects can still be substantial 5960. As we have shown here, BLC is expressed in LN follicles, and CXCR5 is strongly upregulated on activated T cells in LNs. Future studies of BLC-deficient mice should help further dissect the contribution of BLC and CXCR5 to follicular organization and GC formation in LNs.
T cell homing to follicles may be important not only for providing help to B cells, but also for providing activated T cells with growth and survival signals. This possibility is suggested by the finding that antigen injected in the absence of adjuvant fails to promote T cell migration to follicles, and also fails to promote survival of activated or memory T cells 1334. The selective accumulation of the CXCR5-expressing subset of CD4 T cells in aged mice (Fig. 4 C) and in HIV-infected humans during disease progression 61 is consistent with the notion that trafficking through B cell areas plays a role in long-term survival of memory T cells. This possibility is also supported by the finding of a defect in CD4 T cell memory in B cell–deficient mice 62. Although we did not observe trafficking of CXCR5hi memory T cells to follicles in short-term transfer experiments, studies in rats have suggested that memory T cells migrate through follicles at greater frequency than naive T cells 63.
In summary, our findings suggest a model for how helper T cells home to follicles. After engagement of peptide/MHC complexes on appropriately activated T zone DCs, CD4 T cells upregulate CXCR5, acquire responsiveness to the follicular chemokine BLC, and simultaneously downregulate responsiveness to the T zone chemokines ELC and SLC. Together with additional presently undefined changes, this reprogrammed chemokine responsiveness helps propel T cells toward B cell areas. Further cues, such as those emanating from activated B cells and from GC cells, can then act upon these T cells to more precisely control their positioning and facilitate their ability to act as B cell helpers.
| Acknowledgments |
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K.M. Ansel is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute predoctoral fellow, and J.G. Cyster is a Pew Scholar. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grants AI40098 and AI45073.
Submitted: 9 April 1999
Revised: 21 June 1999
Accepted: 10 August 1999
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