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    Differential Migration of CD4+ and CD8+ T Cells During an Immune Response

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    Date
    2018-08-01
    Author
    Parrott, Jacob
    Department
    Biological Sciences
    Advisor(s)
    Douglas Steeber
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    ABSTRACT DIFFERENTIAL MIGRATION OF CD4+ AND CD8+ T CELLS DURING AN IMMUNE RESPONSE by Jacob Parrott The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 2018 Under the Supervision of Professor Douglas Steeber Lymphocyte migration is critical for recognizing pathogenic challenges in a timely manner and generating effective, rapid immune responses. Lymphocyte numbers in secondary lymphoid tissues such as lymph nodes are rapidly and dramatically increased during an immune response. Lymphocytes use specific adhesion molecules and intracellular signaling cascades to migrate and enter secondary lymphoid tissues under resting conditions. It is not clear if the same migration and/or entry pathways are utilized when secondary lymphoid tissues are activated during an immune response. Previous investigations in our lab have shown that T cell subtypes display differential migration patterns to peripheral lymph nodes during an antigen-induced immune response. Additional studies began defining the intracellular signaling cascades and adhesion molecules that may be responsible for the observed differential migration. In the studies presented here, inhibitors of proteins in signaling pathway(s) known to be involved in lymphocyte adhesion and migration were used to identify the intracellular signaling cascades responsible for the observed differential migration. Further, examination of cryosectioned lymphoid tissue by immunofluorescence microscopy sought to elucidate involvement of the inhibited pathways in cellular localization in vivo and the expression of peripheral lymph node addressin in the recruitment of T cells to peripheral lymph nodes. Several possible intracellular signaling pathways (PI3K and ZAP70) and L-selectin (CD62L) were eliminated as the cause of the differential T cell migration during immune responses.
    Subject
    Immune response
    PI3K Pathway
    T cell migration
    ZAP70 Signaling
    Permanent Link
    http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/91774
    Type
    thesis
    Part of
    • UW Milwaukee Electronic Theses and Dissertations

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