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Isolating Lymphocytes from the Mouse Small Intestinal Immune System

  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

57 Scopus citations

Abstract

The intestinal immune system plays an essential role in maintaining the barrier function of the gastrointestinal tract by generating tolerant responses to dietary antigens and commensal bacteria while mounting effective immune responses to enteropathogenic microbes. In addition, it has become clear that local intestinal immunity has a profound impact on distant and systemic immunity. Therefore, it is important to study how an intestinal immune response is induced and what the immunologic outcome of the response is. Here, a detailed protocol is described for the isolation of lymphocytes from small intestine inductive sites like the gut-associated lymphoid tissue Peyer's patches and the draining mesenteric lymph nodes and effector sites like the lamina propria and the intestinal epithelium. This technique ensures isolation of a large numbers of lymphocytes from small intestinal tissues with optimal purity and viability and minimal cross compartmental contamination within acceptable time constraints. The technical capability to isolate lymphocytes and other immune cells from intestinal tissues enables the understanding of immune responses to gastrointestinal infections, cancers, and inflammatory diseases.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere57281
JournalJournal of visualized experiments : JoVE
Volume2018
Issue number132
DOIs
StatePublished - 2018

Keywords

  • flow cytometry
  • Immunology
  • intraepithelial lymphocytes
  • Issue 132
  • lamina propria
  • Lymphocytes
  • mesenteric lymph nodes
  • Peyer's patches
  • small intestine

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