Transformed and nontransformed human T lymphocytes migrate to skin in a chimeric human skin/SCID mouse model.


Autoria(s): Rosenblatt-Velin N.; Arrighi J.F.; Dietrich P.Y.; Schnuriger V.; Masouyé I.; Hauser C.
Data(s)

1997

Resumo

To study human T cell migration to human skin in vivo, we grafted severe combined immunodeficient mice with 500-microm thick human skin. Two weeks after grafting, epidermal and dermal structures in the grafts were of human origin. When we intraperitoneally injected grafted mice with clones of the human HUT-78 T cell line derived from a patient with cutaneous T cell lymphoma and Sézary syndrome, we detected in the grafts the rare Vbeta23-Jbeta1.2 T cell receptor transcripts characteristic for the HUT-78 clones. These signals were found 2-6 d after cell injection in about 40% of the grafted and HUT-78 cell injected mice but not in grafts from mice that received no exogenous T cells. In contrast to HUT-78 cells, which only accumulate in low number, grafts topically challenged with nickel sufate in vaseline from mice that were injected with autologous nickel-reactive T cell lines led to massive accumulation of T cells within 3 d. Only scattered T cells accumulated in the skin when grafted mice received vaseline plus T cells, nickel sulfate alone, T cells alone, or nickel sulfate plus an allogeneic nickel-nonreactive T cell clone. When the T cell lines were labeled with the fluorochrome PKH-26 before cell injection, spots of fluorescent label in the size and shape of cells were found in the grafts challenged with nickel. Together, these results clearly demonstrate that human T cells can migrate to human skin in this chimeric human/mouse model.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_8F1463E4A1BE

isbn:0022-202X

pmid:9406815

doi:10.1111/1523-1747.ep12340755

isiid:A1997YK37600009

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Journal of Investigative Dermatology, vol. 109, no. 6, pp. 744-750

Palavras-Chave #Animals; Cell Movement; Chimera; Humans; Lymphocyte Activation; Mice; Mice, SCID; Nickel/pharmacology; RNA, Messenger/analysis; Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell, alpha-beta/genetics; Skin/immunology; Skin Transplantation; T-Lymphocytes/physiology
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article