Lymphatic migration of unconventional T cells promotes site-specific immunity in distinct lymph nodes

  • Marco A Ataide (Shared first author)
  • Konrad Knöpper (Shared first author)
  • Paulina Cruz de Casas (Shared first author)
  • Milas Ugur
  • Sarah Eickhoff
  • Mangge Zou
  • Haroon Shaikh
  • Apurwa Trivedi
  • Anika Grafen
  • Tao Yang
  • Immo Prinz
  • Knut Ohlsen
  • Mercedes Gomez de Agüero
  • Andreas Beilhack
  • Jochen Huehn
  • Mauro Gaya
  • Antoine-Emmanuel Saliba
  • Georg Gasteiger
  • Wolfgang Kastenmüller

Related Research units

Abstract

Lymphatic transport of molecules and migration of myeloid cells to lymph nodes (LNs) continuously inform lymphocytes on changes in drained tissues. Here, using LN transplantation, single-cell RNA-seq, spectral flow cytometry, and a transgenic mouse model for photolabeling, we showed that tissue-derived unconventional T cells (UTCs) migrate via the lymphatic route to locally draining LNs. As each tissue harbored a distinct spectrum of UTCs with locally adapted differentiation states and distinct T cell receptor repertoires, every draining LN was thus populated by a distinctive tissue-determined mix of these lymphocytes. By making use of single UTC lineage-deficient mouse models, we found that UTCs functionally cooperated in interconnected units and generated and shaped characteristic innate and adaptive immune responses that differed between LNs that drained distinct tissues. Lymphatic migration of UTCs is, therefore, a key determinant of site-specific immunity initiated in distinct LNs with potential implications for vaccination strategies and immunotherapeutic approaches.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN1074-7613
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 11.10.2022

Comment Deanary

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PubMed 36002023