Dendritic
cells, the security cameras of the immune system, derive their
name from their finger-like projections. They continually capture
external proteins, digest the proteins into fragments, and display
those fragments on their surfaces. T cells, the police who watch
the cameras, have the ability to examine the fragments on the
dendritic cells' surfaces and sound the alarm to the rest of the
immune system if they determine that those fragments are dangerous.
Although other kinds of cells also have the ability to present
fragments of foreign proteins to the immune system, dendritic
cells are the most proficient, and immunologists call them "professional"
antigen-presenting cells.
Dendritic
cells migrate between the skin, where one might expect to first
encounter an intruder, and the lymph nodes, where T cells and
other white blood cells congregate. Dr. Jacob's group used transgenic
mice engineered with a marker gene that can be easily detected
by staining, but only when that gene is rearranged by an external
signal. They shot the trigger signal – DNA encoding a specialized
bacterial enzyme - into the skin of the mice. All the cells in
the skin received the trigger signal, but only the dendritic cells
migrated to the draining lymph nodes.
Dr.
Jacob estimates that there are 1,000 dendritic cells for every
square millimeter of skin. His group found that the number of
dendritic cells that migrate into the lymph nodes is 100 times
higher than previously thought, and that they live for two weeks,
rather than just a few days. The scientists were able to observe
the dendritic cells more accurately because the cells were marked
permanently.
"This
research resolves a long-standing puzzle," says Dr. Jacob.
"T cells that will recognize a given foreign protein are
quite rare, so it was hard to imagine how the T cells and dendritic
cells would ever meet. It is still remarkable that they do."
The
gene gun used to send the DNA into the skin uses gold pellets
coated with the DNA. The pellets have a diameter of one micrometer
and are driven with the force of a bullet. Dr. Jacob suggests
that the DNA provides just enough of a signal to induce the dendritic
cells, which are activated by inflammation or physical trauma,
then migrate to the lymph nodes.
The
gene gun could present an attractive alternative to conventional
ways of making vaccines, Dr. Jacob notes. "Usually, you have
to figure out how to grow a virus, then inactivate it so that
it doesn't actually cause an infection. This new methodology could
take advantage of the immunizing capabilities of abundant, long-lived
dendritic cells."
This
story has been adapted from a news release issued by Emory University
Health Sciences Center, www.emory.edu.
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