Review

Nature Reviews Immunology 3, 51-62 (January 2003) | doi:10.1038/nri981

Hepatic T cells and liver tolerance

Ian Nicholas Crispe1  About the author

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The T-cell biology of the liver is unlike that of any other organ. The local lymphocyte population is enriched in natural killer (NK) and NKT cells, which might have crucial roles in the recruitment of circulating T cells. A large macrophage population and the efficient trafficking of dendritic cells from sinusoidal blood to lymph promote antigen trapping and T-cell priming, but the local presentation of antigen causes T-cell inactivation, tolerance and apoptosis. These local mechanisms might result from the need to maintain immunological silence to harmless antigenic material in food. The overall bias of intrahepatic T-cell responses towards tolerance might account for the survival of liver allografts and for the persistence of some liver pathogens.

Author affiliations

  1. The David H Smith Center for Vaccine Biology and Immunology, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, The University of Rochester, Rochester, New York 14642, USA.
    Email: Nick_Crispe@urmc.rochester.edu
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REFERENCE
Regeneration of Liver
Nature Encyclopaedia of Life Sciences

RESEARCH
Efficient presentation of exogenous antigen by liver endothelial cells to CD8+ T cells results in antigen-specific T-cell tolerance
Nature Medicine Article (01 Dec 2000)

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