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Promoting Wound Repair - One of the First Known Biological Roles for
Mysterious Gamma-Delta T Cells Discovered by Researchers at TSRI
La Jolla, CA. April 26, 2002 - Researchers at The Scripps Research Institute
(TSRI) have identified a major role in promoting wound repair played by a mysterious
type of immune cell that resides mainly in the skin and gut - the gamma-delta
T cell.
"Very little has been known about the function of these cells until now," says
TSRI investigator Wendy Havran, Ph.D., who led the effort that detected this
novel function of gamma-delta T cells.
The findings, published in the current issue of the journal Science,
should be important for scientists who are interested in treating diseases that
arise from epithelial cell disorders, like asthma, psoriasis, cancers, and inflammatory
bowel disease.
Havran, who is an associate professor in the Department of Immunology at
TSRI, has been studying gamma-delta T cells for several years. Various biological
roles for the cells had been postulated by scientists, and many researchers had
sought to determine how they might be involved in diseases. Until now these studies
only deepened the mystery of the gamma-delta T cell.
A Cell of Known Origin but Unknown Function
What had been learned of gamma-delta T cells in the nearly two decades since
their initial discovery was that they arise early in fetal development in the
thymus. From there, they migrate to epithelial tissues - the thin outer layer
of cells that makes up the outermost layers of skin and lines organs like the
intestines and lungs.
Unlike the canonical T cells of immunology - the white blood cells - most
gamma-delta T cells do not circulate through the bloodstream. Instead, they are
the major T cell component of the skin, lung, and intestine, where they take
up residence and monitor the neighboring epithelial cells for damage and disease.
Though gamma-delta T cells are the first T cells the thymus produces, this
organ nearly shuts off production of them later in development. Throughout life,
the body maintains its population of gamma-delta T cells "on-site," allowing
them to divide as needed.
In the epidermis where the gamma-delta T cells are concentrated - numbering
half a thousand cells per square centimeter - they have a spiny, stretched-out,
finger-like shape that contacts as many skin cells as possible.
Unlike other T cells in the body, which display a wide diversity of receptors
that recognize a wide diversity of antigens - the molecular components of
various pathogenic invaders - the gamma-delta T cells in the skin seem to
have little, if any, diversity and display a uniform receptor and recognize only
a single antigen.
"When wounds heal, the epithelial cells in the skin have to proliferate and
fill in the wounds," says Havran.
The new study showed that when skin is cut or damaged, keratinocytes, a type
of epithelial cell common in the epidermis, release the antigen that is recognized
by the gamma-delta T cells, which then become activated. Once activated, the
gamma-delta T cells begin making a growth factor that binds to keratinocytes
and other epithelial cells, helping them proliferate and leading to the closure
of the wound.
The activated gamma-delta T cells undergo a morphological change and become
little round factories, concentrating their energy on producing the growth factors
and repairing the wound. They also proliferate, multiplying to increase the response
to the wound.
"When gamma-delta T cells are missing, you see a delay in wound repair," says
Havran, adding that the body still has other mechanisms to facilitate wound repair
that eventually heal the wound.
The research article "A Role for Skin Gamma-Delta T cells in Wound Repair" is
authored by Julie Jameson, Karen Ugarte, Nicole Chen, Pia Yachi, Elaine Fuchs,
Richard Boismenu, and Wendy L. Havran and appears in the April 26, 2002 issue
of Science.
The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Leukemia
and Lymphoma Society.
For more information contact:
Keith McKeown
10550 North Torrey Pines Road
La Jolla, California 92037
Tel: 858.784.8134
Fax: 858.784.8118
kmckeown@scripps.edu
Copyright © 2002 TSRI.
All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of TSRI is prohibited.
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