Abstract

The traffic of lymphocytes is controlled in part by the selective interaction of circulating lymphocytes with specialized high endothelial venule (HEV) cells at sites of lymphocyte exit from the blood. At least three independent receptor systems are responsible for controlling lymphocyte traffic to different lymphoid organs or to sites of inflammation: one mediates lymphocyte interaction with HEV in peripheral lymph nodes, another in mucosa-associated lymphoid tissues, and a third in inflamed synovium. The receptors mediating lymphocyte recognition of HEV in different organs appear to be structurally related yet antigenically and functionally distinct 90 kD glycoproteins. Receptors for lymph node HEV can function as mammalian lectins, and probably interact with specific carbohydrate ligands on high endothelial cells. Mouse and human homing receptors share both antigenic and structural features, indicating a high conservation of lymphocyte-endothelial recognition systems during evolution. They play an essential part in the immune process by controlling lymphocyte traffic during B- and T-cell differentiation, and by segregating effector cells derived from stimulation in different tissues, thus simultaneously increasing the efficiency of organ-specific immune responses and decreasing possibilities for autoimmune crossreactions. Homing receptors are also expressed by many mouse and human lymphoid neoplasms, and appear to play a role in lymphoma metastasis. Related if not identical receptors are expressed by other leukocyte types, including polymorphonuclear leukocytes, monocytes, and large granular lymphocytes (natural killer cells). Thus lymphocyte homing receptors are members of a family of glycoprotein receptors for endothelium that control the extravasation of lymphocytes as well as other leukocytes, and help regulate both non-specific and specific immune responses in vivo.

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