An additional role of FTY720 in chronic colitis

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Abstract

FTY720 is a sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor modulator, which inhibits T-cell egress from lymph nodes, thereby prevents pathogenic T cells from migrating towards disease sites. In inflammatory bowel diseases, it is thought that colitogenic memory CD4+ T cells are intermittently reactivated in regional lymphoid organs, and return to inflammatory tissues. Little is known about how FTY720 controls the migration property of memory T cells and whether FTY720 could control the trafficking of T cells without the presence of lymphoid tissues. First, we here demonstrated that FTY720 prevents the development of colitis induced by the adoptive transfer of colitogenic lamina propria effector-memory CD4+ T (TEM) cells into SCID mice. Next, We demonstrated that FTY720 treatment suppresses the recirculation of CD4+ T cells in splenectornized lymphotoxin-α -/- mice that lack lymph nodes and spleen. Cell number of CD4+ T cells was markedly decreased in peripheral blood of FTY720-treated mice, but conversely increased in bone marrow. Notably, FTY720 treatment prevented the development of colitis induced by transfer of colitogenic TEM cells into SPX LT-a-/- x RAG-2-/- mice. Collectively, the present data indicate that FTY720 treatment may offer an additional role to direct trafficking of CD4+ T cells in BM, resulting in the prevention of memory T cell-mediated diseases including inflammatory bowel diseases. © 2009 The Japan Society for Clinical Immunology.

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APA

Fujii, T., & Watanabe, M. (2009). An additional role of FTY720 in chronic colitis. Japanese Journal of Clinical Immunology. https://doi.org/10.2177/jsci.32.7

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