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CD44 has been implicated in hyaluronan (HA)-dependent primary adhesion between leukocytes and endothelium. We studied the trafficking of lymphocytes of CD44-deficient DBA/1 mice under normal conditions, and during chronic and transient forms of inflammation. Animals homozygous for the CD44 mutation (CD44(-/-)) showed no abnormalities in the composition of the lympho-hemopoietic system, but their leukocytes could not recognize HA as an adhesion ligand. T cells from CD44-deficient mice responded normally to immunization with type II collagen or stimulation with a bacterial superantigen. Lymphocytes harvested from naive CD44(-/-) and wild-type (WT) animals showed similar trafficking properties when injected into naive recipients. However, cells from WT and CD44-deficient mice with collagen-induced arthritis showed distinct migration kinetics upon transfer to arthritic recipients. While lymphocytes from CD44(-/-) mice preferentially homed to lymph nodes, their entry into the inflamed synovial joints was delayed as compared with WT cells. Similar differences were observed in the migration kinetics of CD44-deficient and CD44-competent (CD44(+/+)) lymphocytes in bacterial superantigen-induced peritonitis. These results suggest that CD44 plays opposite roles in the regulation of leukocyte traffic to inflammatory sites versus the lymph nodes. CD44-deficient lymphocytes from animals with chronic arthritis, but not from those with transient peritonitis, expressed markedly reduced levels of the lymph node homing receptor, L-selectin. Extreme down-modulation of L-selectin from CD44(-/-) cells in arthritic condition might be a counter-regulatory response, which, by extending lymphocyte transit time in the circulation at the expense of lymph node homing, allows CD44-deficient cells to gain entry to the site of chronic inflammation via secondary adhesion mechanisms.
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Reinout Stoop
Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research
István Gál
Rush University Medical Center
Tibor T. Glant
Rush University Medical Center
European Journal of Immunology
Pfizer (United States)
Rush University Medical Center
Presbyterian St. Luke's Medical Center
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Stoop et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a18764f25af1eb19ec9adf9 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/1521-4141(200209)32:9<2532::aid-immu2532>3.0.co;2-a