[HTML][HTML] Direct priming of antiviral CD8+ T cells in the peripheral interfollicular region of lymph nodes

HD Hickman, K Takeda, CN Skon, FR Murray… - Nature …, 2008 - nature.com
HD Hickman, K Takeda, CN Skon, FR Murray, SE Hensley, J Loomis, GN Barber…
Nature immunology, 2008nature.com
It is uncertain how antiviral lymphocytes are activated in draining lymph nodes, the site
where adaptive immune responses are initiated. Here, using intravital microscopy we show
that after infection of mice with vaccinia virus (a large DNA virus) or vesicular stomatitis virus
(a small RNA virus), virions drained to the lymph node and infected cells residing just
beneath the subcapsular sinus. Naive CD8+ T cells rapidly migrated to infected cells in the
peripheral interfollicular region and then formed tight interactions with dendritic cells …
Abstract
It is uncertain how antiviral lymphocytes are activated in draining lymph nodes, the site where adaptive immune responses are initiated. Here, using intravital microscopy we show that after infection of mice with vaccinia virus (a large DNA virus) or vesicular stomatitis virus (a small RNA virus), virions drained to the lymph node and infected cells residing just beneath the subcapsular sinus. Naive CD8+ T cells rapidly migrated to infected cells in the peripheral interfollicular region and then formed tight interactions with dendritic cells, leading to complete T cell activation. Thus, antigen presentation at the lymph node periphery, not at lymphocyte exit sites in deeper lymph node venules, as dogma dictates, has a dominant function in antiviral CD8+ T cell activation.
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