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CCL5-producing migratory dendritic cells guide CCR5+ monocytes into the draining lymph nodes

Kavita Rawat, Anita Tewari, Xin Li, Arlind B. Mara, W. T. King, Sophie L. Gibbings, Chinaza F. Nnam, Fred Kolling, Bart N. Lambrecht, Claudia Jakubzick

2023The Journal of Experimental Medicine102 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Dendritic cells (DCs) and monocytes capture, transport, and present antigen to cognate T cells in the draining lymph nodes (LNs) in a CCR7-dependent manner. Since only migratory DCs express this chemokine receptor, it is unclear how monocytes reach the LN. In steady-state and following inhalation of several PAMPs, scRNA-seq identified LN mononuclear phagocytes as monocytes, resident, or migratory type 1 and type 2 conventional (c)DCs, despite the downregulation of Xcr1, Clec9a, H2-Ab1, Sirpa, and Clec10a transcripts on migratory cDCs. Migratory cDCs, however, upregulated Ccr7, Ccl17, Ccl22, and Ccl5. Migratory monocytes expressed Ccr5, a high-affinity receptor for Ccl5. Using two tracking methods, we observed that both CD88hiCD26lomonocytes and CD88-CD26hi cDCs captured inhaled antigens in the lung and migrated to LNs. Antigen exposure in mixed-chimeric Ccl5-, Ccr2-, Ccr5-, Ccr7-, and Batf3-deficient mice demonstrated that while antigen-bearing DCs use CCR7 to reach the LN, monocytes use CCR5 to follow CCL5-secreting migratory cDCs into the LN, where they regulate DC-mediated immunity.

Topics & Concepts

LymphCCL5ImmunologyMedicinePathologyImmune systemT cellIL-2 receptorImmunotherapy and Immune ResponsesImmune Cell Function and InteractionT-cell and B-cell Immunology