Review

Nature Reviews Immunology 8, 362-371 (May 2008) | doi:10.1038/nri2297

CCR7 and its ligands: balancing immunity and tolerance

Reinhold Förster1, Ana Clara Davalos-Misslitz1 & Antal Rot2  About the authors

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A key feature of the immune system is its ability to induce protective immunity against pathogens while maintaining tolerance towards self and innocuous environmental antigens. Recent evidence suggests that by guiding cells to and within lymphoid organs, CC-chemokine receptor 7 (CCR7) essentially contributes to both immunity and tolerance. This receptor is involved in organizing thymic architecture and function, lymph-node homing of naive and regulatory T cells via high endothelial venules, as well as steady state and inflammation-induced lymph-node-bound migration of dendritic cells via afferent lymphatics. Here, we focus on the cellular and molecular mechanisms that enable CCR7 and its two ligands, CCL19 and CCL21, to balance immunity and tolerance.

Author affiliations

  1. Institute of Immunology, Hannover Medical School; 30625 Hannover, Germany.
  2. Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research, Vienna, Brunnerstrasse 59, A-1235 Vienna, Austria.

Correspondence to: Reinhold Förster1 Email: foerster.reinhold@mh-hannover.de

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