Upregulation of VCAM-1 in lymphatic collectors supports dendritic cell entry and rapid migration to lymph nodes in inflammation
Abstract
Dendritic cell (DC) migration to draining lymph nodes (dLNs) is a slow process that is believed to begin with DCs approaching and entering into afferent lymphatic capillaries. From capillaries, DCs slowly crawl into lymphatic collectors, where lymph flow induced by collector contraction supports DC detachment and thereafter rapid, passive transport to dLNs. Performing a transcriptomics analysis of dermal endothelial cells, we found that inflammation induces the degradation of the basement membrane (BM) surrounding lymphatic collectors and preferential up-regulation of the DC trafficking molecule VCAM-1 in collectors. In crawl-in experiments performed in ear skin explants, DCs entered collectors in a CCR7- and β1 integrin–dependent manner. In vivo, loss of β1-integrins in DCs or of VCAM-1 in lymphatic collectors had the greatest impact on DC migration to dLNs at early time points when migration kinetics favor the accumulation of rapidly migrating collector DCs rather than slower capillary DCs. Taken together, our findings identify collector entry as a critical mechanism enabling rapid DC migration to dLNs in inflammation. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000488251Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Journal of Experimental MedicineVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Rockefeller University PressOrganisational unit
03683 - Detmar, Michael (emeritus) / Detmar, Michael (emeritus)
03816 - Halin Winter, Cornelia / Halin Winter, Cornelia
Funding
182528 - Interactions of Leukocytes within and with Lymphatic Vessels: Elucidating their Impact on Immune Regulation and Leukocyte Migration (SNF)
156269 - Elucidating the mechanism and the functional significance of leukocyte migration through afferent lymphatic vessels (SNF)
Related publications and datasets
Is supplemented by: https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000623375
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