Kruse Andrea, Martens Nicole, Fernekorn Uta, Hallmann Rupert, Butcher Eugene C
Institut für Immunologie und Transfusionsmedizin, Universität zu Lübeck, 23538 Lübeck, Germany.
Biol Reprod. 2002 Feb;66(2):333-45. doi: 10.1095/biolreprod66.2.333.
One of the most fascinating immunologic questions is how the genetically distinct fetus is able to survive and develop within the mother without provoking an immune rejection response. The pregnant uterus undergoes rapid morphological and functional changes, and these changes may influence the nature of local immune responses at the maternal/fetal interface at different stages of gestation. We hypothesized that specialized mechanisms exist to control access of maternal leukocyte subsets to the decidua and that these mechanisms are modulated during the course of pregnancy. At the critical period of initial placenta development, the maternal/fetal interface displays an unparalleled compartmentalization of microenvironmental domains associated with highly differentiated vessels expressing vascular addressins in nonoverlapping patterns and with recruitment of specialized leukocyte subsets (monocytes, granulated metrial gland cells, and granulocytes) thought to support, modulate, and regulate trophoblast invasion. One of the most striking observations at this time of gestation is the almost complete exclusion of lymphocytes from the maternal/fetal interface. The second half of pregnancy is characterized by a partial loss of microenvironmental specialization and different switches in vascular specificity within the decidua basalis, paralleling dramatic changes in the populations of recruited leukocytes (e.g., a striking influx of lymphocytes, especially T cells). In the term pregnant uterus, the expression of all vascular addressins decreased dramatically; only weakly staining maternal vascular segments remained. These segments may define sites of extremely low residual traffic in the term decidua, which contains remarkably few maternal leukocytes overall. Our results suggest that the maternal/fetal interface represents a situation in which leukocyte trafficking is exquisitely regulated to allow entry of specialized leukocyte subsets that may play a fundamental role in immune regulation during pregnancy.
最引人入胜的免疫学问题之一是,基因上有差异的胎儿如何在母体内存活并发育,而不会引发免疫排斥反应。妊娠子宫会经历快速的形态和功能变化,这些变化可能会影响妊娠不同阶段母胎界面处局部免疫反应的性质。我们推测存在专门的机制来控制母体白细胞亚群进入蜕膜,并且这些机制在妊娠过程中会受到调节。在胎盘初始发育的关键时期,母胎界面呈现出一种无与伦比的微环境区域分隔,与高度分化的血管相关,这些血管以不重叠的模式表达血管地址素,并募集专门的白细胞亚群(单核细胞、颗粒状子宫内膜腺细胞和粒细胞),这些细胞被认为可支持、调节和调控滋养层细胞的侵入。在这个妊娠阶段最引人注目的观察结果之一是淋巴细胞几乎完全被排除在母胎界面之外。妊娠后半期的特征是微环境特异性部分丧失,基底蜕膜内血管特异性发生不同转变,这与募集的白细胞群体的显著变化(例如淋巴细胞,尤其是T细胞的大量涌入)并行。在足月妊娠子宫中,所有血管地址素的表达都显著下降;仅残留少量染色较弱的母体血管段。这些血管段可能定义了足月蜕膜中极低残留流量的部位,而足月蜕膜总体上含有的母体白细胞极少。我们的结果表明,母胎界面代表了一种白细胞运输受到精确调节的情况,以允许可能在妊娠期间免疫调节中发挥重要作用的专门白细胞亚群进入。