Contributions from Self-Renewal and Trafficking to the Uterine NK Cell Population of Early Pregnancy
Author(s) -
Sirirak Chantakru,
Craig W. Miller,
Lindsay E. Roach,
William A. Kuziel,
Nobuyo Maeda,
WanChao Wang,
Sharon S. Evans,
B. Anne Croy
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.168.1.22
Subject(s) - decidualization , biology , lymphopoiesis , immunology , decidua , microbiology and biotechnology , uterus , chemokine , population , decidual cells , chemotaxis , receptor , endocrinology , stem cell , pregnancy , fetus , medicine , inflammation , haematopoiesis , placenta , biochemistry , genetics , environmental health
Uterine NK (uNK) cells are abundant in human and murine uteri during decidualization. It is unclear whether precursors of uNK (pre-uNK) cells self-renew or are recruited from other sites. To assess self-renewal of pre-uNK cells, uterine segments from NK cell-competent mice were grafted orthotopically into NK/uNK cell-deficient or wild-type mice. Only in wild-type recipients did decidualized grafts contain uNK cells, indicating that pre-uNK cells do not self-renew in uterus. To identify pre-uNK cell sources, thymus, bone marrow, lymph node, or spleen cells were grafted from virgin or pregnant NK cell-competent donors into mated NK/uNK cell-deficient recipients. Cells from secondary lymphoid tissues of pregnant donors gave high level uNK cell reconstitution, which was independent of chemokine receptors CCR2 or CCR5. Pregnancy-induced changes to lymphocyte-endothelial cell interactions were documented using adhesion of human lymphocytes to frozen mouse tissue sections under shear. A dynamic increase was observed in L-selectin- and alpha(4) integrin-dependent adhesion of CD56(bright) NK cells to decidualizing uterus and in human PBL adhesion to lymph node endothelium. These data support a model that attributes the dramatic increases in human and murine uNK cells during decidualization to precursor cell recruitment.
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