By
From the * Laboratory of Molecular Pathology, Department of Pathology, University of Texas
Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75235-9072; Department of Dermatology, University
of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75235-9069; and § Harvard Medical School,
Department of Pathology, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
L-selectin, an adhesion molecule constitutively expressed on leukocytes, is important for primary adhesion and extravasation of lymphocytes at specialized high endothelial venules within lymph nodes and other leukocytes at sites of inflammation. We have generated L-selectin-deficient mice by targeted disruption, and have confirmed a previously reported phenotype which includes strikingly impaired contact hypersensitivity (CHS) responses to reactive haptens (Tedder, T.F., D.A. Steeber, and P. Pizcueta. 1995. J. Exp. Med. 181:2259-2264; Xu, J.C., I.S. Grewal, G.P. Geba, and R.A. Flavell. 1996. 183:589-598.). Since the mechanism of this impairment has not been clarified, we sought to define the stage(s) at which the CHS response is affected in L-selectin-deficient mice. We show that epidermal Langerhans cells in L-selectin- deficient mice are normal in number, migrate to peripheral lymph nodes appropriately, and are functional in presenting allogeneic and haptenic antigens. Moreover, T cells, as well as neutrophil and monocyte effector populations, are fully capable of entry into the inflamed skin sites in the absence of L-selectin. Thus, antigen presentation and effector mechanisms are intact in L-selectin deficient mice. In contrast, virtually no antigen-specific T cells can be found within draining peripheral nodes after a contact challenge, suggesting that the defect resides primarily in the inability of antigen-specific T cells to home to and be activated in these nodes. Indeed, L-selectin-deficient mice mount completely normal CHS responses when alternate routes of immunization are used. These studies pinpoint the lesion in CHS to a discrete stage of the afferent limb of the response, clarify the role of L-selectin on effector populations, and illustrate the critical importance of the route of antigen entry to the successful execution of an immune response.
To access antigen within the tissues and to maintain effective immune surveillance, lymphocytes must first
traverse the vascular barrier and then continuously recirculate from the blood to organized lymphoid and extra-lymphoid sites (1). This tissue-specific traffic is regulated in part
by the interaction between adhesion receptors on the surface of lymphocytes called homing receptors and their ligands
on specialized postcapillary endothelial cells (2). L-selectin
is expressed on T cells, B cells, neutrophils, and monocytes.
All three selectins, including endothelial E- and P-selectin,
mediate the repeated transient primary adhesion of leukocytes, termed rolling, to vascular endothelium via interactions between their Ca2+-dependent lectin domains and
their respective carbohydrate ligands (3). Subsequent firm
adhesion is primarily mediated by integrin molecules and
their ligands, both members of the immunoglobulin superfamily. In combination, the sequential participation of these adhesion families provides much of the information required for site-specific leukocyte trafficking (4, 5).
L-selectin was first identified as the peripheral lymph
node (PLN)1 specific homing receptor in mice (2, 6, 7),
and has been shown to be important both for the homing
of lymphocytes to PLN and traffic of other leukocytes to
sites of inflammation. Naive lymphocytes exit the blood via
morphologically distinct postcapillary high endothelial venules
in lymph nodes and other secondary lymphoid organs (1,
8). While much evidence has supported the role of L-selectin in lymphocyte homing to lymph nodes, perhaps most
compelling has been the development of L-selectin-deficient mice, which, as demonstrated here and previously (9,
10), results in PLN strikingly diminished in size and extensively lymphocyte-depleted.
With these mice, we have begun to investigate the role
of L-selectin in the development of an immune response
using contact hypersensitivity (CHS) as an experimental
model of delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH). The ability
to obtain a measurable reaction to a contact allergen is dependent on a distinct pathway whose interruption at any of
the following steps may cause an impaired response. (a)
Epidermal Langerhans cells (LC), MHC class II bearing dendritic cells of the skin, are the major antigen presenting cells within the skin, and have been shown to be required
for the initiation of contact sensitization (11, 12). Thus, the absence of LC, their lack of migration into lymph nodes,
and/or their inability to function in antigen presentation,
could result in an impaired response. (b) Circulating naive
T cells may fail to exit the vasculature into PLN, preventing antigen encounter. (c) T cell activation within lymph
nodes may not occur. (d ) Impaired T cell traffic to the
challenged skin site may subvert a response. Lastly (e ), the
ability of nonspecific effector cells to migrate to and enter
the inflamed site may be abrogated. Thus, this antigen-specific inflammatory pathway engages in a defined sequence
all of the hematolymphoid elements which express L-selectin, and provides the opportunity to determine at which
juncture(s) the lack of L-selectin impacts the response.
We demonstrate here that the antigen presentation pathway and effector functions are intact in L-selectin-deficient
mice and that the major defect in responsiveness is due to
the lack of T cell sensitization in draining PLN. These results further our understanding of the important role of
L-selectin in lymphocyte homing and thus the development of PLN, the consequences of its absence for the generation of primary immune responses, and the essential role
of these secondary lymphoid organs in mounting responses
to contact challenges.
Reagents and Antibodies.
Benzylkonium chloride, croton oil,
Con A, 2,4-dinitrofluorobenzene (DNFB), 2,4-dinitrobenzyl sulfonic acid (DNBS), trinitrobenzyl sulfonic acid (TNBS), 2-phenyl-4-ethoxymethylene oxazolone (oxazolone), and FITC were
purchased from Sigma Chem. Co. (St. Louis, MO). PMA and
geneticin were obtained from GIBCO BRL (Gaithersburg, MD),
ionomycin from Calbiochem Corp. (La Jolla, CA), and GM-CSF from GIBCO BRL (Gaithersburg, MD). Gancyclovir was obtained from Roche BioScience. (Palo Alto, CA). The following
anti-mouse antibodies were used for FACS® analysis and immunohistochemistry: anti-CD4, anti-CD8 Generation of L-selectin Mutant Mice.
Transfection of embryonic stem (ES) cells was done using 100 µg of linearized targeting
vector DNA into 107 J1 cells (gift of R. Jaenish, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA) or AB1 cells (gift of A. Bradley, Baylor College, Houston, TX), and grown in 250 µg/ml
active Geneticin and 2 µm gancyclovir. Primary analysis of clones
was done by Southern hybridization with probes both 5
CHS Responses.
CHS responses were induced using the antigen DNFB as previously described (11, 15). 25 µl of 0.5% DNFB
in 4:1 acetone/olive oil solution was painted on the shaved abdomens of mice on days 0 and 1. Mice were challenged on days 5 or
9 by topical application of 20 µl of 0.2% DNFB (10 µl/side of
the pinna). CHS responses to oxazolone were obtained by applying 25 µl of a 100 mg/ml solution in 4:1 acetone/olive oil onto
the shaved abdomens on day 0, and then challenging on days 7 or
12 with 10 µl of a 10 mg/ml solution of oxazolone (5 µl/side).
CHS responses to FITC were induced by applying 0.4 ml of
freshly made 5% FITC in 1:1 acetone/dibutylpthalate to the abdomen as previously described (16). 6 d later, the CHS reaction
was elicited by applying 10 µl of the FITC solution (5 µl/side).
(GIBCO BRL); antiCD3
, anti-I-Ab, anti-GR-1, anti-CD8, anti-CD11b, anti-B220,
anti-TNP (hamster anti-mouse isotype control) (PharMingen,
San Diego, CA); anti-Thy1.2 (Becton Dickinson Co., San Jose,
CA); anti-I-A (anti-I-Ab,d,q and I-Ed,k, M5/114.15.2, American
Type Culture Collection, Rockville, MD), and anti-Mac-1 (M1/
70) (13) (American Type Culture Collection); anti-F4/80 (13)
(American Type Culture collection); and anti-L-selectin, MEL14 (2). The following secondary reagents were used when applicable: fluorescein-conjugated goat anti-rat immunoglobulin (goat
anti-rat Ig-FITC), goat anti-mouse immunoglobulin-FITC, streptavidin-PE (CALTAG Labs., San Francisco, CA), and goat anti- rabbit IgG (Jackson ImmunoResearch Labs., Inc., West Grove, PA).
and 3
of the targeting vector. Correctly targeted J1 or AB1 ES cells
with normal karyotypes were injected into C57BL/6J blastocysts
and transferred to pseudopregnant females. Chimeras from one J1
and one AB1 clone were mated to C57BL/6J animals. Agouti
offspring were typed by Southern hybridization of tail DNA for
the mutant L-selectin allele (see Fig. 1 B). L-selectin heterozygous mice derived from one J1 and one AB1 clone were separately intercrossed to obtain two independent homozygous L-selectin-deficient mouse lines. There was no difference in phenotype
between J1- and AB1-derived mice, and the former were generally used for these studies.
Fig. 1.
Generation and characterization of L-selectin deficient mice.
(A)The neomycin resistance gene driven by the PGK promoter was inserted into the lectin domain, exon 3, of a targeting vector containing
6.5 kb of L-selectin genomic DNA. The HSV-thymidine kinase gene was
added to the 3 end of the replacement vector as a negative selection
marker. (B) Southern hybridization of L-selectin-deficient mouse DNA
shows only the mutated L-selectin allele. Mouse-tail DNA was digested
with BglII and hybridized with a radiolabeled intron-1 probe. Only the
mutant 4.8-kb allele is present in the homozygous L-selectin-deficient
mouse (*). Both the mutant 4.8-kb and the germline 2.8-kb allele are
present in the heterozygous mouse. (C ) Peripheral nodes (inguinal, brachial, and axillary) were excised from L-selectin-deficient, heterozygous, and wild-type littermate mice and weighed. Both L-selectin wild-type and heterozygous mice have significantly increased weights over L-selectin mutant animals (n = 9; P <0.05). (D) Primary adhesion of L-selectin-
deficient, heterozygous mutant, and wild-type spleen cells to PNAd. Cells
were analyzed under shear stress in coated glass capillary tubes at 2.1 dynes/cm2 (40). Wild-type mice have signifcantly greater numbers of
splenocytes rolling on PNAd-coated surfaces than either heterozygous or
homozygous L-selectin-deficient mice (P <0.05).
[View Larger Version of this Image (36K GIF file)]
T Cell Activation Assays. In vitro proliferation to DNBS, the water soluble analog of DNFB, was carried out as described (15) with a few modifications. Briefly, inguinal, axillary, and brachial lymph nodes from either two L-selectin-deficient mice or two wild-type littermate controls, sensitized on the abdomen with DNFB 5 d before, were collected and pooled. Spleens and mesenteric lymph nodes (MLN) were also collected and pooled. Cells were cultured in the presence or absence of DNBS (50 µg/ml). Polyclonal activation was accomplished by incubating pooled PLN cells or spleen cells with 1 ng/ml PMA plus 500 ng/ml Ionomycin or with 5 µg/ml of Con A. Proliferation in response to immobilized anti-CD3 was accomplished by incubating 4 × 104 pooled PLN or spleen cells with increasing concentrations of anti-CD3 or control antibody. All cultures were pulsed with 1 µCi/ well of [3H]thymidine for 18 h.
Purification of Draining Langerhans Cells. I-A+ LC from PLN were purified as described (18). 24 h after application of hapten (DNFB or FITC) to the abdomens of mice, pooled inguinal, axillary, and brachial lymph nodes were homogenized, filtered through nylon mesh, and washed in RPMI 1640/10% FCS. 4 ml of a cell suspension containing either 5 × 106 wild-type cells or 1 × 106 L-selectin-deficient cells were layered onto 2 ml of metrizamide (14.5 g/100 ml of medium; Sigma Chemical Co.). Cells were centrifuged at 600 × g for 10 min at room temperature, and the cells at the interface were collected.
In Vitro Antigen Presentation Assays. Allogeneic mixed lymphocyte reactions were performed as described (19). Stimulator cells were LC purified from draining lymph nodes and irradiated with 2,000 RADS. Responder cells were either BALB/c or C57BL/6J nylon wool-purified splenic T cells (20). To remove residual dendritic cells, B cells, and macrophages from responder cell populations, T cell preparations were incubated with anti-I-A for 40 min and lysed in baby rabbit complement (Pel-Freeze Biologicals, Rogers, AZ) for 40 min. 98% of responder cells were T cells by FACS® analysis with anti-Thy1.2-FITC. 2 × 105 responder T cells were incubated with varying concentrations of irradiated LC for 24 h.
For antigen-specific proliferation assays, antigen pulsing was performed by incubation of naive PLN cells with 25 mM DNBS in PBS for 25 min at 37°C, followed by irradiation (2,000 RADS). 25,000 irradiated PLN cells were incubated with increasing numbers of T cells from wild-type mice sensitized 5 d before with DNFB. Proliferation for both assays was measured by [3H]thymidine uptake as described above.Immunohistochemistry. Ears were severed from mice, embedded in OCT compound, and frozen. Serial cryostat sections were fixed in methanol and stained with the following antibodies: GR-1, Mac-1, CD4, CD8, B220, Thy1.2, and MEL-14. Sections were rinsed with PBS and biotinylated secondary antibody and/or streptavidin horseradish peroxidase was added. 1X DAB (0.5 µg/ml diaminobenzidene) and 0.03% H2O2 in 50 mM Tris was added for 10 min, slides were washed in PBS/0.5% CuSO4, and counterstained with methylene blue.
Adoptive Transfer and Delayed-Type Hypersensitivity with Haptenated Spleen Cells. Adoptive transfer of wild-type T cells to naive mice was performed as described (21) with minor modifications. PLN cells from wild-type mice sensitized 5 d before with 25 µl of DNFB or from control untreated mice were harvested, depleted of macrophages and B cells using biotinylated anti-Mac-1 and anti-B220 followed by streptavidin-conjugated magnetic beads (DYNAL Inc., Lake Success, NY). 2 × 107 T cells (98% pure by FACS®) were injected intravenously into wild-type or L-selectin-deficient mice. 12 h later, mice were elicited with DNFB and 24 h ear swelling responses were measured.
Splenic dendritic cells were prepared as described (22), with minor modifications. Splenocytes were plated and incubated at 37°C for 90 min. Nonadherent cells were removed and GM-CSF was added at 10 ng/ml to the adherent cells. Cells released after overnight incubation in GM-CSF were used as splenic dendritic cell preparations. These were haptenated by incubation with 25 mM DNBS as described above. For intravenous and subcutaneous immunizations, 1 × 106 DNBS-treated purified splenic dendritic cells or 2 × 107 splenocytes were injected into naive L-selectin- deficient or wild-type littermate control mice. Control groups received uncoupled cells for both injection routes. For elicitation, mice were challenged with 0.25% of DNFB on the left pinna (10 µl) 5 d after cell injection.Mice disrupted at the L-selectin locus were created using the techniques of homologous recombination in ES cells (23, 24). A fragment of the L-selectin genomic DNA containing exons 2-6 was used to construct a replacement vector, and exon 3, encoding the lectin domain, was chosen for disruption (Fig. 1 A). Phosphoglycerate kinase promotor/neomycin resistance gene (PGKneo) was inserted into the BglII site of the lectin domain in the same transcriptional orientation as L-selectin. Targeting vector DNA was introduced into ES cells and recombinant ES clones were injected into blastocysts of C57Bl/6 mice. Resulting male chimeras were crossed to C57Bl/6 females, germline transmission was confirmed by Southern blotting, and heterozygous animals were mated to obtain mice homozygous for the mutation (Fig. 1 B).
L-selectin expression on leukocytes is absent in L-selectin mutant mice, and Northern analysis showed no transcript when probed with full-length L-selectin cDNA (data not shown). The general features of these mice are substantially in agreement with those reported by Arbones et al. (10). The striking anatomic defect is the dramatic decrease in weight of PLNs (Fig. 1 C), which are characterized by abnormal architecture, with no distinction of cortical and medullary regions and no B cell follicles. Although lymphocyte numbers in the mutant nodes are decreased almost 90%, cell surface analysis reveals no difference in the percentages of CD4 T cells, CD8 T cells, or B cells compared to wild-type mice. L-selectin deficient spleens were significantly increased (30%) in size over wild type, accompanied by a 25% increase in T cells, presumably due to the displacement of T cells from lymph nodes to spleen. Functionally, L-selectin-deficient leukocytes failed to exhibit rolling on the major high endothelial venules borne L-selectin ligand, peripheral node addressin (PNAd), in an in vitro flow assay (Fig. 1 D). Cells from heterozygous animals exhibited ~50% of the level of rolling of wild-type cells, correlating with surface L-selectin expression levels.
L-selectin-deficient Mice Exhibit Impaired CHS Responses.Because of the multiple sites at which L-selectin can contribute, CHS responses were used to examine the functional significance of the loss of L-selectin expression. These
mice show markedly impaired CHS responses to each of
the tested haptens DNFB, oxazolone, and FITC (Fig. 2 A).
It is also of interest that the response of sensitized heterozygous mice to DNFB was not significantly different from
the response of wild-type mice (Fig. 2 A), despite less effective adhesion under shear forces. The extent of ear swelling is comparable among sensitized mutant mice, nonsensitized mutant mice, and nonsensitized wild-type mice,
suggesting that no substantial antigen-specific element to
the response was present in L-selectin-deficient mice. In
contrast, while hapten-specific responses are blunted in
L-selectin-deficient mice, the nonspecific irritant response,
different for each hapten, remains intact in mutant animals
(see below). Moreover, the irritant effect is not due to vehicle since both DNFB and oxazolone, each with different irritant effects, are applied in the same vehicle.
Xu et al. have reported previously that L-selectin-deficient mice exhibit normal CHS responses to oxazolone at 9 d after sensitization (2). We routinely sensitize with oxazolone for 7 d and we see no significant response in our mutant animals at this time point (Fig. 2 A). In addition, delaying elicitation until day 12 also had no effect on the unresponsiveness of L-selectin-deficient mice (Fig. 2 B). To further examine whether the kinetics of ear swelling after challenge were altered, animals were sensitized with DNFB and elicited 9 d after priming (Fig. 2 B). No response was induced at this time point, whether measurements were taken at 24, 48, or 72 h after elicitation. Therefore, it is clear that the duration of unresponsiveness is long-lasting under our conditions.
Langerhans Cells in L-selectin-deficient Mice Are Present, Traffic Normally, and Present Antigen.It is known that LC are bone marrow derived (25) and that L-selectin is expressed on bone marrow progenitors (26). Therefore, their development and/or homing to skin may be impaired in these mice. Fig. 3 A shows a representative whole mount of abdominal skin from an L-selectin-deficient and wildtype mouse stained with anti-I-A. Comparison of L-selectin mutant mice and wild-type littermate controls showed that there was no difference in the density, morphology, or distribution of these cells. The average number of I-A+ epidermal cells in L-selectin-deficient mice was 1,050 ± 180/mm2 compared to 1,080 ± 160 /mm2 in wild-type mice. Thus, LC are present in normal densities in these L-selectin-deficient mice. In addition, no differences were noted in Thy-1+ dendritic epidermal T cells (data not shown).
To study whether antigen-bearing LC traffic from the
skin to lymph node appropriately in L-selectin-deficient
animals, the contact sensitizing reagent FITC was used. It
has previously been shown that the FITC+/I-A+ cells in
the draining nodes 24 h after skin painting are predominantly LC which have migrated from the skin (18). Fig. 3 B
shows that in both the L-selectin-deficient animals and
wild-type controls about 25% of the metrizamide-enriched
dendritic cell population were FITC+/I-A+. These cells
did not stain with antibodies to murine CD3-, B220, or
to the F4/80 macrophage marker, consistent with their
dendritic cell origin. Furthermore, analysis of metrizamide
purified dendritic cells from the spleen (Fig. 3 B) and MLN
(not shown) revealed that LC do not migrate to other secondary lymphoid tissues (<0.4% FITC+/I-A+). These results indicate that antigen painted on the epidermis of L-selectin mutant mice is taken up by I-A+ APCs which then
migrate in normal numbers to PLN, but not other secondary lymphoid tissues.
To determine whether LC in the L-selectin mutant mice are functionally active, dendritic cells from draining lymph nodes of hapten sensitized mice were purified and examined for their capacity to activate allogeneic T cells. Isolated allogeneic BALB/c (H-2d) or syngeneic C57BL/6J (H-2b) T cells were mixed with either wild-type or L-selectin- deficient irradiated dendritic cells (H-2b) (Fig. 3 C). Dendritic cells isolated from L-selectin-deficient mice were as potent as those from wild-type controls in stimulating allogeneic T cells. Furthermore, to examine presentation of a conventional antigen, dendritic cells from both wild-type and L-selectin-deficient mice were conjugated to DNBS to serve as APCs, irradiated, and incubated with purified T cells from wild-type mice sensitized with DNFB. L-selectin- deficient cells were as competent at stimulating antigenspecific proliferation of T cells as wild-type cells (Fig. 3 D). These results indicate that LC in L-selectin deficient mice are functionally active.
L-selectin-deficient Mice Do Not Develop Antigen-Specific T Cells in Response to a CHS Challenge.We next tested if
there was altered T cell responsiveness in L-selectin-deficient mice. A T cell defect could be due either to a failure
of T cells to be stimulated in lymph nodes in the afferent
limb, or an inability of antigen-specific T cells to traffic to
the inflammatory site in the efferent limb. To test the
former, antigen-specific responses in draining lymph nodes were examined (15). L-selectin-deficient or wild-type animals were painted with DNFB and 5 d later, lymph nodes
were removed and incubated in vitro with DNBS. Fig. 4 A
shows that proliferation of L-selectin-deficient lymph node
T cells in response to DNBS is decreased 97% compared to
wild-type lymph node T cells, indicating a profound deficit
in antigen-specific T cells in PLN.
Because L-selectin-deficient mice have compensatory T cell traffic to the spleen, it was possible that other secondary lymphoid organs provided alternative sites for T cell stimulation. Although low but detectable stimulation was present in spleen and MLN from wild-type mice, there was no detectable response in these organs from mutant mice (Fig. 4 A). This nonresponsiveness was still demonstrable when spleen, MLN, and PLN were examined 9 d after sensitization. Thus, DNFB-reactive T cells in normal mice reside overwhelmingly in PLNs after contact sensitization, and there is no compensatory shift to other sites in L-selectin-deficient mice.
To test for an intrinsic signaling defect in L-selectin-deficient lymph node T cells, we examined their capacity to proliferate in response to polyclonal activation. Fig. 4 B shows that T cells from L-selectin-deficient mouse lymph nodes proliferated comparably to wild-type animals in response to stimulation by PMA + Ionomycin, Con A, or immobilized CD3 mAb, suggesting that pathways of T cell activation in vitro are intact in L-selectin-deficient lymph node T cells.
Adoptive Transfer of Sensitized Normal T Lymphocytes into L-selectin-deficient Mice Restores the Ability to Respond to a CHS Agent.The actual ear swelling component of CHS
is thought to be initiated by antigen-specific T cells followed by the recruitment of nonspecific effector cells (27).
To examine the efferent limb of the response, we transferred 2 × 107 lymph node T cells purified from wild-type
mice sensitized 5 d earlier with DNFB intravenously into
either L-selectin-deficient or wild-type littermate control
mice, which were challenged on the ear 12 h later with
DNFB. Responses were measured 24 h later. Fig. 5 shows
there is no significant difference between the response of
wild-type and L-selectin-deficient mice when sensitized
wild-type T cells are transferred. Furthermore, not only is
ear swelling restored, but the nonspecific effector cells,
which lack L-selectin, are effectively recruited into the elicitation site. Quantitative analysis with GR-1, Mac-1, and
T cell markers revealed infiltrates which were indistinguishable between wild-type and L-selectin-deficient mice (Table 1). This demonstrates that sensitized T cells are sufficient to obtain an ear swelling response in mutant mice, that there are no other local defects in L-selectin-deficient mice precluding a normal response, and that nonlymphoid
effector cell trafficking is appropriate.
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If the defect in L-selectin- deficient mice is solely that mutant lymphocytes cannot home to PLNs for sensitization, then immunization via routes which allow sensitization at sites other than PLN should permit the development of an immune response. Splenic dendritic cells from L-selectin-deficient or wildtype animals were therefore conjugated with DNBS and injected intravenously or subcutaneously into mutant or wild-type animals. Figs. 6, A and B, show that L-selectin- deficient, antigen-pulsed splenic dendritic cells delivered by either route result in an ear swelling response in mutant mice equivalent to wild type. To determine where antigen-reactive T cells resided, in vitro T cell proliferative responses to hapten, measured 5 d following subcutaneous injection of L-selectin-deficient antigen-pulsed splenic dendritic cells, were performed. Proliferation was substantial in T cell splenic cultures from L-selectin-deficient mice (6,869 ± 630 cpm), but was essentially background in lymph node T cells (125 ± 100 cpm). In contrast, in wildtype mice, proliferative activity occurred primarily in the lymph node cells (7,800 ± 721 cpm), and, to a lesser extent, in spleen (2,445 ± 202 cpm) after subcutaneous injection. Thus, antigen-specific proliferation of splenic, but not lymph node, T cells from L-selectin-deficient mice was evident, even after subcutaneous immunization where sensitization normally proceeds via draining lymph nodes. These results suggest that the entire pathway of DTH is intact when the peripheral node dependence of the response is removed.
Immunohistochemical analysis of elicited ears confirms the comparable infiltrates of T cells as well as granulocytes and monocytes in L-selectin-deficient and control animals (Fig. 6 C, Table 1), indicating that L-selectin-deficient T cells are competent in responding to antigen and trafficking to the challenged skin site. These results also demonstrate that L-selectin-deficient dendritic cells are equally effective at sensitizing wild-type mice to DNFB as wild-type dendritic cells. Therefore, the results reinforce the observation that there is no defect in the ability of L-selectin-deficient T cells, neutrophils, or monocytes to enter the inflamed ear (Table 1), and that antigen presentation is intact.
L-selectin-deficient Mice Have a Normal Acute Response to Irritants.We have shown that when primed T cells are supplied, L-selectin-deficient mice support the full development of a CHS response, including the recruitment of
L-selectin negative nonspecific effector cells. We chose to
induce an acute response to evaluate the nonspecific effector arm in isolation. Mice were painted with a solution of the irritants 0.8% croton oil or 5% benzylkonium chloride,
and the change in ear thickness was measured 16 h after application. Fig. 7 shows that there was no significant difference in the ear swelling between L-selectin-deficient and
wild-type mice. Additionally, ears were embedded, sectioned, and analyzed with antibodies to GR-1, Mac-1,
CD4, CD8, Thy1.2, and B220. Immunohistologic analysis revealed infiltrates consisting of macrophages and granulocytes but no T or B cells (Table 1). In addition, there was
no significant difference in the density of granulocytes in
L-selectin-deficient animals compared to wild type. In contrast to the DNFB specific response, the infiltrate in this nonspecific response was overwhelmingly neutrophils (GR-1+)
and not monocytes (Table 1). Therefore, an antigen-independent inflammatory response can be mounted normally
in L-selectin deficient mice, and can occur without initiation by T cells.
During a CHS response, L-selectin may be necessary at any or all stages, explaining impaired CHS responses in L-selectin-deficient mice. Therefore, we have evaluated these stages systematically. Since it is expressed on most bone marrow-derived mature and progenitor cell types, L-selectin could be involved in either the development or migration of antigen presenting cells. However, L-selectin- deficient mice have a completely intact antigen presentation pathway (Figs. 3, A-D). In addition, our results also emphasize that CHS responses are unique in that they absolutely rely on LC and their migration to draining peripheral nodes. We did not observe migration of LC to spleen (Fig. 3 B) or MLN, even 96 h after topical application of FITC (data not shown). In contrast, administration of antigen by intravenous or subcutaneous routes resulted in completely normal CHS responses (Fig. 6). Thus, since CHS does not support systemic distribution of antigen, a topical route of antigen entry allows an isolated assessment of the impact of PLN in L-selectin-deficient mice.
The ability to respond specifically to all reactive haptens tested after cutaneous sensitization is severely impaired in L-selectin-deficient mice (Fig. 2 A). However, since baseline irritant swelling was unaffected, the data suggested that there was a defect at the level of the antigen-specific T cell. PLN in L-selectin mice are small, but have normal ratios of CD4 and CD8 T cells and B cells. Since there is a clear lack of T cell sensitization in PLN (Fig. 4 A), the resident lymphocyte population in these nodes is either quantitatively or qualitatively inadequate for CHS immune responses, and traffic of T cells to the nodes is apparently so limited as to preclude recruitment of sufficient additional cells to initiate a response. These results emphasize (a) the extreme dependence which lymphocyte homing to peripheral nodes has on the lymph node homing receptor, L-selectin, (b) that significant compensatory mechanisms for this function do not exist, and (c) the vital role which PLN play in a contact response, since in the absence of functional peripheral nodes, alternative pathways to sensitization are not invoked.
It has been shown that activation of naive T cells is accompanied by the downregulation or shedding of L-selectin in conjunction with increased levels of other activation and adhesion markers (28, 29). Therefore, loss of L-selectin after activation has been thought to aid in the diversion of lymphocytes from secondary lymphoid organs to effector sites. We demonstrate that L-selectin is indeed unnecessary for activated T cells to enter a site of inflamed skin; when priming is performed intravenously or subcutaneously, L-selectin-deficient mice can respond with characteristic DTH and cellular infiltrates, including T cells, indistinguishable from wild type (Fig. 6 C, Table 1). It is noteworthy that subcutaneous immunization, which generally proceeds via sensitization in lymph nodes, results in normal contact responses in these mutant mice. It is clear that LC migrate normally to lymph nodes in L-selectin-deficient mice (Fig. 3 B), and we have demonstrated that FITClabeled splenic dendritic cells administered subcutaneously also traffic to PLN similarly to what occurs in wild type (data not shown). Therefore, antigen traffic appears to proceed normally after subcutaneous injection. However, the fact that in vitro antigen proliferation is seen only in spleen and not lymph nodes in mutant mice suggests that under the unusual circumstances of these defective nodes, compensatory responsiveness occurs in the spleen. It is possible that the capacity of lymph nodes to retain APCs is exceeded with the relatively large numbers of subcutaneously injected cells compared to topical hapten application, such that excess cells localize in the spleen. Therefore, it seems most likely that in the absence of L-selectin, homing and recruitment of antigen-specific T cells, and therefore sensitization at PLN sites, is compromised in L-selectin-deficient mice, and that after subcutaneous immunization, antigenreactive cells localize in the spleen, allowing a normal contact response. Finally, whatever other adhesion pathways are operative, our observations suggest that L-selectin does not fundamentally influence the entry of activated T cells into inflammatory sites of the skin.
L-selectin expression on circulating antigen nonspecific effector populations (i.e., neutrophils and monocytes) has been suggested to be an important mediator of the primary adhesion of these cells at sites of inflammation (10, 30- 32). However, the centrality of L-selectin in the trafficking of monocytes and neutrophils to such sites is complicated in part by the contributions of the endothelial selectins. The development of mice disrupted at L-, P-, and/or E-selectin loci has confirmed both the distinct, and sometimes overlapping, functions of this family in inflammatory processes (10, 33). Pertinent to work presented here, P-selectin-deficient mice have been shown to have decreased infiltrates in CHS (36). Our findings show that neutrophils and monocytes do not require L-selectin to enter a site of CHS (Figs. 5 and 6, Table 1), or an inflammatory site even when the response is not initiated by T cells (Fig. 7). Mice disrupted at both P- and E-selectin have demonstrated the importance and interdependence of these molecules in leukocyte recruitment (35), as these animals are prone to spontaneous skin infections. L-selectin does not compensate for the absence of endothelial selectins in this skin condition, consistent with our findings. Additionally, since L-selectin has been suggested to be the ligand for endothelial selectins for human leukocytes (37), if P- and/or E-selectin are important for primary adhesion at sites of CHS in our mutant animals, L-selectin is not the leukocyte ligand. Therefore, at least for responses in the skin, L-selectin is not obligatory for inflammatory cells to gain entry.
The response of our L-selectin-deficient mice to sensitization with oxazolone differs in some key respects from that reported by Xu et al. (9). In particular, our studies show CHS of these mice is severely impaired 24 h after elicitation compared to wild type, while they see no difference at 24 h when compared to wild type. Our results are similar to those reported by Tedder et al. (38). In addition, Xu et al. (9) reported that increasing the time between sensitization and challenge from 4 to 9 d resulted in restoration of normal DTH in mutant animals. We see no such induction of responses at later times to either the identical antigen, oxazolone, or to DNFB (Fig. 2 B). These discrepancies may be reconciled by the fact that Xu et al. (9) used significantly larger doses (5 ×) for elicitation, which may have resulted in a greater degree of nonspecific inflammation, and which is unabated in mutant animals at day 9. Alternatively, higher concentrations of antigen may allow non-LC populations to present antigen (39). Thus, our findings indicate that absolute responses are dramatically altered from wild type and the failure to induce an antigenspecific response is quite long lasting.
These studies demonstrate that PLNs which are severely compromised, as in these L-selectin-deficient mice, can have dramatic consequences for the outcome of an immune response. The importance of the classical route of trafficking naive T cells through PLN is illustrated, as well as the absolute requirement of these lymphoid organs for productive immunity in responses which rely on epidermal LC for antigen presentaion. L-selectin-deficient mice have intact antigen processing, delivery, and presentation as well as effector limbs for both lymphoid and nonlymphoid components, but do not develop sufficient antigen-specific T cells to mount a response. These observations emphasize the crucial importance of microenvironmental niches to the immune system, and the tight regulation of the traffic of antigen, as well as of leukocytes, which can determine the fate of an immune response.
Address correspondence to Pila Estess, Laboratory of Molecular Pathology, Department of Pathology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75235-9072.
Received for publication 13 August 1996
M.H. Siegelman received support from the National Institute of Health (NIH) (R01 CA57571) and The Welch Foundation (I-227). P. Estess received support from NIH (RO1 AI32855). M.C. Carroll received support from NIH (AI 32544 and HD 1746). A. Takashima received support from NIH (RO1 AR35068 and RO1 AI43777). M.D. Catalina is a student in the Graduate Program of Immunology, Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, UTSWMCD.We thank Beni Stewart for excellent graphical and photographic assistance.
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