Author:
Espinosa-Carrasco Gabriel,Saout Cécile Le,Fontanaud Pierre,Michau Aurélien,Mollard Patrice,Hernandez Javier,Schaeffer Marie
Abstract
AbstractT cell search behavior is dictated by their need to encounter their specific antigen to eliminate target cells. However, mechanisms controlling effector T cell motility are highly tissue-dependent. Specifically, how diabetogenic T cells encounter their target beta cells in dispersed islets throughout the pancreas during autoimmune diabetes remains unclear. Using intra-vital 2-photon microscopy in a mouse model of diabetes, we found that CXCR3 chemokine downregulated CD8+ T cell motility specifically within islets, promoting effector cell confinement to their target sites. In contrast, T cell velocity and directionality in the exocrine tissue were enhanced along blood vessels and extra-cellular matrix fibers. This guided migration implicated integrin-dependent interactions, since integrin blockade impaired exocrine T cell motility. In addition, integrin β1 blockade decreased CD4+ T cell effector phenotype specifically in the pancreas. Thus, we unveil an important role for integrins in the pancreas during autoimmune diabetes that may have important implications for the design of new therapies.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory