In this report, we have addressed two questions concerning immunological memory: the way in which naive and memory T cells recirculate through the body, and the intrinsic rate of division within the naive and memory populations. We identified naive and memory T cells in sheep by their cell surface phenotype and their ability to respond to recall antigen. Memory T cells were CD2hi, CD58hi, CD44hi, CD11ahi, and CD45R-, as pertains in man. T cells that crossed from blood to the tissues of the hind leg and accumulated in the popliteal afferent lymph were all of memory phenotype. Conversely, T cells in efferent lymph, 90% of which entered the lymph node (LN) via high endothelial venules (HEV), were mostly of the naive phenotype (CD2lo, CD58lo, CD44lo, CD11alo, and CD45R+). The marked enrichment of these two phenotypes in different recirculatory compartments indicated that memory T cells selectively traffic from blood to peripheral tissues to LN (via afferent lymph), whereas naive T cells selectively traffic from blood to LN (via HEV). We argue that the differential use of these two recirculation pathways probably optimizes lymphocyte interactions with antigen. The nonrandom distribution of T cell subsets in various recirculatory compartments may be related to the relative proportion of memory cells in each subset. In particular, gamma/delta T cells in blood were almost exclusively of memory phenotype, and accumulated preferentially in afferent, but not in efferent, lymph. Finally, using the bromo-deoxyuridine labeling technique, we found that at least a sizeable proportion of memory T cells, whether in blood or afferent lymph, were a dividing population of cells, whereas naive T cells were a nondividing population. This result supports an alternative model of lymphocyte memory that assumes that maintenance of memory requires persistent antigenic stimulation.
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1 March 1990
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March 01 1990
Naive and memory T cells show distinct pathways of lymphocyte recirculation.
C R Mackay,
C R Mackay
Basel Institute for Immunology, Switzerland.
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W L Marston,
W L Marston
Basel Institute for Immunology, Switzerland.
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L Dudler
L Dudler
Basel Institute for Immunology, Switzerland.
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C R Mackay
Basel Institute for Immunology, Switzerland.
W L Marston
Basel Institute for Immunology, Switzerland.
L Dudler
Basel Institute for Immunology, Switzerland.
Online ISSN: 1540-9538
Print ISSN: 0022-1007
J Exp Med (1990) 171 (3): 801–817.
Citation
C R Mackay, W L Marston, L Dudler; Naive and memory T cells show distinct pathways of lymphocyte recirculation.. J Exp Med 1 March 1990; 171 (3): 801–817. doi: https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.171.3.801
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