T cell repertoire scanning is promoted by dynamic dendritic cell behavior and random T cell motility in the lymph node

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Abstract

Dendritic cells (DCs) ingest antigens in peripheral tissues and migrate to lymph nodes where they present MHC class II-bound antigen to CD4+ T cells. We used two-photon microscopy to image the single-cell dynamics of interactions between DCs and T cells within intact lymph nodes in the absence of relevant antigen. DCs were fluorescently labeled in vivo by cutaneous injection of alum adjuvant including carboxyfluorescein diacetate succinimidyl ester (CFSE). CFSE-positive DCs (CD11c+, CD11b+, and low-to-intermediate CD8+) were observed in draining lymph nodes 24-72 h later. Labeled DCs meandered slowly (2-3 μm-min-1) in the T cell zone near B cell follicles but vigorously extended long agile dendrites. Encounters between T cells and DCs arose as T cells moved autonomously along random paths. Moreover, T cells did not accumulate around DCs, and their relative velocities approaching and departing DCs were equivalent, implying that T cells are not attracted toward DCs by chemotactic gradients but rather encounter them by chance. T cell/DC contacts occurred primarily on dendrites at arm's length from the DC soma and typically lasted ≈3 min, enabling an individual DC to interact with up to 5,000 T cells per hour. We conclude that dynamic DC gesticulation and random T cell motility together enhance the stochastic scanning of the T cell repertoire, thereby enabling rapid initiation of the immune response.

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Miller, M. J., Hejazi, A. S., Wei, S. H., Cahalan, M. D., & Parker, I. (2004). T cell repertoire scanning is promoted by dynamic dendritic cell behavior and random T cell motility in the lymph node. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 101(4), 998–1003. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0306407101

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