News and Research
Immune System
White Blood Cells Are Much More Active And Dynamic
5-16-2002
Irvine, Calif., White blood cells are much more active and
dynamic than previously assumed and show complex behaviors
for responding to foreign bodies, a University of California,
Irvine study has shown for the first time.
The
study also marks the first time researchers have seen single
immune system cells operating in intact lymph nodes, their
native environment in the body, and gives new insight into
the tactics used by these cells, known as T- and B-cells,
to fight disease. The researchers' study appears in the
May 16 issue of Science Express, the online version of Science
magazine.
Ian
Parker, professor of neurobiology and behavior; Michael
Cahalan, professor of physiology and biophysics; and Mark
Miller, postgraduate researcher, adapted a technique called
two-photon imaging to observe individual T-cells and B-cells
in mice as the cells moved within lymph nodes in the body.
The technique allowed the researchers to observe the cells'
behavior in ways that had never been possible using previous
techniques.
"Previously,
researchers had not been able to see the behavior of these
cells in their native immune organs. When looking at the
cells' behavior, the lymph node had been a 'black box' with
no direct information on how cells were interacting,"
Parker said. "This new form of microscopy gives us
an unprecedented view of how the immune system functions.
The cells are moving and changing shape in ways that we've
never seen; this should provide insight on how disease is
combated and perhaps even how the immune system can fail."
The
researchers found that T- and B-cells move much faster in
their native lymph nodes than seen in previous research
and that the cells appear to move randomly when not stimulated
by any number of chemical signals or foreign bodies. The
researchers also noticed that T-cells abruptly changed their
shape, speed and direction, suggesting that they were interacting
with some unseen body or signal as they explored the environment
within the lymph node.
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T-cells, which
are responsible for directing the body's immune response against foreign
bodies (including pathogens) explored a much wider territory within
the lymph node than did B-cells, which produce antibodies that help
target foreign bodies for destruction.
The two-photon
imaging system hooks up a pulsed laser with a light microscope. The
ultra-fast laser pulses allow imaging of cells lying relatively deep
within tissues (such as the lymph nodes in this study), and a computer
generates three-dimensional pictures so researchers can review the
cells' activity as it actually happens.
"The images
are giving us a wealth of information on how these cells move about
in their environment. Right now, we're like naturalists studying a
new species in the wild," Cahalan said.
"These environmental
interactions may be key to understanding how white cells function
in a living animal and provide valuable insight for the development
of new immunosuppressive drugs," Miller said. "We think
this technique will also be useful for studying cells in other areas
of the immune system, such as the thymus gland, spleen and even sites
of inflammation and disease."
The researchers,
who worked for two years to get the images used in this study, now
are looking at using the two-photon technique in other parts of the
body and to further determine the cellular interactions that occur
in the immune system.
Parker, Miller
and Cahalan's colleagues included Sindy Wei of UCI. Their research
was supported by grants from the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Disease and the National Institute of General Medical Sciences.
This
article has been adapted from a news release issued by University
Of California, Irvine, www.uci.edu.
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