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  • Title: Immunohistochemical characterization of intraepithelial and subepithelial mononuclear cells of the upper airways.
    Author: Graeme-Cook F, Bhan AK, Harris NL.
    Journal: Am J Pathol; 1993 Nov; 143(5):1416-22. PubMed ID: 8238257.
    Abstract:
    The upper airway is the first site of exposure to inhaled antigens and the site of initiation of mucosal immunity to certain antigens; however, the intraepithelial lymphoid populations of this region have not been well characterized. We studied 6-mu frozen tissue sections from tonsils, adenoids, and nasal mucosae using immunohistochemistry and a panel of antibodies to mononuclear antigens to determine whether nasal mucosa contained distinctive populations of mononuclear cells. Intraepithelial lymphocytes (IELs) of nasal mucosa were CD3+, CD8+, and mainly CD5+. Tonsil and adenoid both showed diffuse CD8+ IELs; clusters of CD4+ IELs were associated with B cells within the crypt epithelium. All nasal IELs were uniformly negative for Leu8 (homing receptor analog of Mel14). Scattered Leu8-positive cells were present within tonsil and adenoid crypt epithelium only. Nasal IELs rarely expressed HML1 and were often CD7-, whereas the majority of tonsillar and adenoidal IELs were HML1+ and variably CD7+. In nasal mucosa and in deep submucosa of tonsil and adenoid, 80 to 90% of T cell receptor expression was of alpha/beta type. There was a concentration of gamma/delta T cell receptor-positive cells in intraepithelial and subepithelial zones of tonsil and adenoid, with areas of up to 30% gamma/delta T cell receptor positivity. A population of intraepithelial dendritic cells was identified in all three tissues expressing mononuclear phagocyte system antigens CD14 and KiM1P, but lacking CD1a. Virtually no B cells and no organized subepithelial lymphoid tissue were identified in nasal mucosa. Nasal mucosal lymphoid tissue seems to differ from that of endodermally derived mucosae, tonsil, and adenoids to share similarities with both mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue and peripheral lymph nodes.
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