Abstract

In this report, we have addressed two questions concerning immunological memory: the way in which naive and memory T cells recirculate through the body, and the intrinsic rate of division within the naive and memory populations. We identified naive and memory T cells in sheep by their cell surface phenotype and their ability to respond to recall antigen. Memory T cells were CD2hi, CD58hi, CD44hi, CD11ahi, and CD45R-, as pertains in man. T cells that crossed from blood to the tissues of the hind leg and accumulated in the popliteal afferent lymph were all of memory phenotype. Conversely, T cells in efferent lymph, 90% of which entered the lymph node (LN) via high endothelial venules (HEV), were mostly of the naive phenotype (CD2lo, CD58lo, CD44lo, CD11alo, and CD45R+). The marked enrichment of these two phenotypes in different recirculatory compartments indicated that memory T cells selectively traffic from blood to peripheral tissues to LN (via afferent lymph), whereas naive T cells selectively traffic from blood to LN (via HEV). We argue that the differential use of these two recirculation pathways probably optimizes lymphocyte interactions with antigen. The nonrandom distribution of T cell subsets in various recirculatory compartments may be related to the relative proportion of memory cells in each subset. In particular, gamma/delta T cells in blood were almost exclusively of memory phenotype, and accumulated preferentially in afferent, but not in efferent, lymph. Finally, using the bromo-deoxyuridine labeling technique, we found that at least a sizeable proportion of memory T cells, whether in blood or afferent lymph, were a dividing population of cells, whereas naive T cells were a nondividing population. This result supports an alternative model of lymphocyte memory that assumes that maintenance of memory requires persistent antigenic stimulation.

Keywords

BiologyLymphImmunologyLymph nodePhenotypeCD28AntigenT cellNeuroscienceCell biologyPathologyImmune systemMedicineGeneticsGene

MeSH Terms

AnimalsAntigensCDBromodeoxyuridineImmunologic MemoryLymphLymphocyte ActivationPhenotypeSheepT-Lymphocytes

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Publication Info

Year
1990
Type
article
Volume
171
Issue
3
Pages
801-817
Citations
784
Access
Closed

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784
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28
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612
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Cite This

Charles R. Mackay, Wendy L. Marston, L Dudler (1990). Naive and memory T cells show distinct pathways of lymphocyte recirculation.. The Journal of Experimental Medicine , 171 (3) , 801-817. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.171.3.801

Identifiers

DOI
10.1084/jem.171.3.801
PMID
2307933
PMCID
PMC2187792

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%