Catecholamine Modulation of Lymphocyte Homing to Lymphoid Tissues
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文摘
Lymphocyte migration is an essential process for immune surveillance and for promoting cell–cell interactions necessary to generate an immune response. This report examined whether catecholamine prestimulation would alter the pattern of lymphocyte homing to spleen and lymph nodes in mice as determined by tracking fluorescently labeled cells. The results of cell sorter analysis showed that catecholamine-pretreated cells had increased accumulation in spleen and lymph nodes 1 and 2 h after iv injection. In addition, microscopic analysis showed that labeled cells migrated from the splenic red pulp to T-cell regions of the white pulp over a 2-h time course. Within the lymph nodes, labeled cells localized predominantly to the pericortex. Additional studies examined the migration of lymphocytes to lymphoid tissues of NGF-transgenic mice that have sympathetic hyperinnervation of spleen and peripheral lymph nodes. In contrast to the studies above, migration of T-cells from control mice to lymphoid tissues of the hyperinnervated mice was not different than that in control mice in most tissues. The accumulation of lymphocytes in lymphoid tissues is a balance between the influx of newly migrated cells and efflux back into the circulation. The studies in this report lend support to other studies showing catecholamine modulation of lymphocyte migration and homing, but it is a complex process about which much has yet to be understood.

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