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The transporter Spns2 is required for secretion of lymph but not plasma sphingosine-1-phosphate
Mendoza, Alejandra; Breart, Beatrice; Ramos-Perez, Willy D; Pitt, Lauren A; Gobert, Michael; Sunkara, Manjula; Lafaille, Juan J; Morris, Andrew J; Schwab, Susan R
Plasma sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) regulates vascular permeability, and plasma and lymph S1P guide lymphocyte egress from lymphoid organs. S1P is made intracellularly, and little is known about how S1P is delivered into circulatory fluids. Here, we find that mice without the major facilitator superfamily transporter Spns2 have a profound reduction in lymph S1P, but only a minor decrease in plasma S1P. Spns2-deficient mice have a redistribution of lymphocytes from the spleen to lymph nodes and a loss of circulating lymphocytes, consistent with normal egress from the spleen directed by plasma S1P and blocked egress from lymph nodes directed by lymph S1P. Spns2 is needed in endothelial cells to supply lymph S1P and support lymphocyte circulation. As a differential requirement for lymph and blood S1P, Spns2 may be an attractive target for immune suppressive drugs.
PMCID:3616498
PMID: 23103166
ISSN: 2211-1247
CID: 288532
The Microbiota Limit CX3CR1+Cell-Dependent Trafficking of a Pathogenic Bacterium to the Mesenteric Lymph Nodes [Meeting Abstract]
Diehl, Gretchen; Longman, Randy; Zhang, Jing-Xin; Breart, Beatrice; Schwab, Susan; Littman, Dan
ISI:000304659700543
ISSN: 0022-1767
CID: 169545
The role of lipid phosphate phosphatase 1 in lymphocyte egress from lymphoid organs [Meeting Abstract]
Ramos-Perez, Willy; Escalante-Alcalde, Diana; Lynch, Kevin; Schwab, Susan
ISI:000304659702132
ISSN: 0022-1767
CID: 169550
Sphingosine-1-phosphate and lymphocyte egress from lymphoid organs
Cyster, Jason G; Schwab, Susan R
Much has been learned about how cells enter lymphoid tissues. But how do they leave? Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) has emerged over the past decade as a central mediator of lymphocyte egress. In this review, we summarize the current understanding of how S1P promotes exit from the secondary lymphoid organs and thymus. We review what is known about additional requirements for emigration and summarize the mostly distinct requirements for exit from the bone marrow. Egress from lymphoid organs is limited during immune responses, and we examine how this regulation works. There is accumulating evidence for roles of S1P in directing immune cell behavior within lymphoid tissues. How such actions can fit together with the egress-promoting role of S1P is discussed. Finally, we examine current understanding of how FTY720, a drug that targets S1P receptors and is approved for the treatment of multiple sclerosis, causes immune suppression.
PMID: 22149932
ISSN: 0732-0582
CID: 169441
Lipid phosphate phosphatase 3 enables efficient thymic egress
Breart, Beatrice; Ramos-Perez, Willy D; Mendoza, Alejandra; Salous, Abdelghaffar K; Gobert, Michael; Huang, Yong; Adams, Ralf H; Lafaille, Juan J; Escalante-Alcalde, Diana; Morris, Andrew J; Schwab, Susan R
The signaling lipid sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) stabilizes the vasculature, directs lymphocyte egress from lymphoid organs, and shapes inflammatory responses. However, little is known about how S1P distribution is controlled in vivo, and it is not clear how a ubiquitously made lipid functions as a signal that requires precise spatial and temporal control. We have found that lipid phosphate phosphatase 3 (LPP3) enables efficient export of mature T cells from the thymus into circulation, and several lines of evidence suggest that LPP3 promotes exit by destroying thymic S1P. Although five additional S1P-degrading enzymes are expressed in the thymus, they cannot compensate for the loss of LPP3. Moreover, conditional deletion of LPP3 in either epithelial cells or endothelial cells is sufficient to inhibit egress. These results suggest that S1P generation and destruction are tightly regulated and that LPP3 is essential to establish the balance
PMCID:3173249
PMID: 21576386
ISSN: 1540-9538
CID: 134311
Lymphatic endothelial cell sphingosine kinase activity is required for lymphocyte egress and lymphatic patterning
Pham, Trung H M; Baluk, Peter; Xu, Ying; Grigorova, Irina; Bankovich, Alex J; Pappu, Rajita; Coughlin, Shaun R; McDonald, Donald M; Schwab, Susan R; Cyster, Jason G
Lymphocyte egress from lymph nodes (LNs) is dependent on sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P), but the cellular source of this S1P is not defined. We generated mice that expressed Cre from the lymphatic vessel endothelial hyaluronan receptor 1 (Lyve-1) locus and that showed efficient recombination of loxP-flanked genes in lymphatic endothelium. We report that mice with Lyve-1 CRE-mediated ablation of sphingosine kinase (Sphk) 1 and lacking Sphk2 have a loss of S1P in lymph while maintaining normal plasma S1P. In Lyve-1 Cre+ Sphk-deficient mice, lymphocyte egress from LNs and Peyer's patches is blocked. Treatment with pertussis toxin to overcome Galphai-mediated retention signals restores lymphocyte egress. Furthermore, in the absence of lymphatic Sphks, the initial lymphatic vessels in nonlymphoid tissues show an irregular morphology and a less organized vascular endothelial cadherin distribution at cell-cell junctions. Our data provide evidence that lymphatic endothelial cells are an in vivo source of S1P required for lymphocyte egress from LNs and Peyer's patches, and suggest a role for S1P in lymphatic vessel maturation.
PMCID:2812554
PMID: 20026661
ISSN: 0022-1007
CID: 377342
Cortical sinus probing, S1P1-dependent entry and flow-based capture of egressing T cells
Grigorova, Irina L; Schwab, Susan R; Phan, Tri Giang; Pham, Trung H M; Okada, Takaharu; Cyster, Jason G
The cellular dynamics of the egress of lymphocytes from lymph nodes are poorly defined. Here we visualized the branched organization of lymph node cortical sinuses and found that after entry, some T cells were retained, whereas others returned to the parenchyma. T cells deficient in sphingosine 1-phosphate receptor type 1 probed the sinus surface but failed to enter the sinuses. In some sinuses, T cells became rounded and moved unidirectionally. T cells traveled from cortical sinuses into macrophage-rich sinus areas. Many T cells flowed from medullary sinuses into the subcapsular space. We propose a multistep model of lymph node egress in which cortical sinus probing is followed by entry dependent on sphingosine 1-phosphate receptor type 1, capture of cells in a sinus region with flow, and transport to medullary sinuses and the efferent lymph
PMCID:2710451
PMID: 19060900
ISSN: 1529-2916
CID: 94653
Finding a way out: lymphocyte egress from lymphoid organs
Schwab, Susan R; Cyster, Jason G
The egress of lymphocytes from the thymus and secondary lymphoid organs into circulatory fluids is essential for normal immune function. The discovery that a small-molecule inhibitor of lymphocyte exit, FTY720, is a ligand for sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) receptors led to studies demonstrating that S1P receptor type 1 (S1P1) is needed in T cells and B cells for their egress from lymphoid organs. S1P exists in higher concentrations in blood and lymph than in lymphoid organs, and this differential is also required for lymphocyte exit. Transcriptional and post-translational mechanisms regulate S1P1 and thus the egress of lymphocytes. In this review we discuss the body of evidence supporting a model in which lymphocyte egress is promoted by encounter with S1P at exit sites. We relate this model to work examining the effects of S1P receptor agonists on endothelium
PMID: 18026082
ISSN: 1529-2916
CID: 94654
Promotion of lymphocyte egress into blood and lymph by distinct sources of sphingosine-1-phosphate
Pappu, Rajita; Schwab, Susan R; Cornelissen, Ivo; Pereira, Joao P; Regard, Jean B; Xu, Ying; Camerer, Eric; Zheng, Yao-Wu; Huang, Yong; Cyster, Jason G; Coughlin, Shaun R
Lymphocytes require sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) receptor-1 to exit lymphoid organs, but the source(s) of extracellular S1P and whether S1P directly promotes egress are unknown. By using mice in which the two kinases that generate S1P were conditionally ablated, we find that plasma S1P is mainly hematopoietic in origin, with erythrocytes a major contributor, whereas lymph S1P is from a distinct radiation-resistant source. Lymphocyte egress from thymus and secondary lymphoid organs was markedly reduced in kinase-deficient mice. Restoration of S1P to plasma rescued egress to blood but not lymph, and the rescue required lymphocyte expression of S1P-receptor-1. Thus, separate sources provide S1P to plasma and lymph to help lymphocytes exit the low-S1P environment of lymphoid organs. Disruption of compartmentalized S1P signaling is a plausible mechanism by which S1P-receptor-1 agonists function as immunosuppressives
PMID: 17363629
ISSN: 1095-9203
CID: 74368
All the peptides that fit: the beginning, the middle, and the end of the MHC class I antigen-processing pathway
Shastri, Nilabh; Cardinaud, Sylvain; Schwab, Susan R; Serwold, Thomas; Kunisawa, Jun
The end result of the antigen-processing pathway is the display of peptide-bound major histocompatibility complex I (pMHC I) molecules. The pMHC I molecules are expressed on the cell surface where they can be surveyed by CD8(+) T cells for abnormal proteins. MHC I molecules present a large repertoire of peptides that fit perfectly in their binding grooves and represent the otherwise hidden intracellular contents. Many peptides originate as defective ribosomal products in the cytoplasm. In a stepwise manner, the antigen-processing pathway generates and protects the proteolytic intermediates until they yield the final peptides that can fit the MHC I in the endoplasmic reticulum
PMID: 16181325
ISSN: 0105-2896
CID: 74361