Endothelial basement membrane laminin alpha5 selectively inhibits T lymphocyte extravasation into the brain Wu, Chuan Fredrik, Ivars Anderson, Per Olof Rupert, Hallmann Dietmar, Vestweber Nilsson, Per Robenek, Horst Tryggvason, Karl Song, Jian Korpos, Eva Loser, Karin Beissert, Stefan Georges-Labouesse, Elisabeth Sorokin, Lydia M laminin a5 extravasation brain Specific inhibition of the entry of encephalitogenic T lymphocytes into the central nervous system in multiple sclerosis would provide a means of inhibiting disease without compromising innate immune responses. We show here that targeting lymphocyte interactions with endothelial basement membrane laminins provides such a possibility. In mouse experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, T lymphocyte extravasation correlates with sites expressing laminin a4 and small amounts of laminin a5. In mice lacking laminin a4, laminin a5 is ubiquitously expressed along the vascular tree, resulting in marked and selective reduction of T lymphocyte infiltration into the brain and reduced disease susceptibility and severity. Vessel phenotype and immune response were not affected in these mice. Rather, laminin a5 directly inhibited integrin a6b1–mediated migration of T lymphocytes through laminin a4. The data indicate that T lymphocytes use mechanisms distinct from other immune cells to penetrate the endothelial basement membrane barrier, permitting specific targeting of this immune cell population. 2024-09-23T08:46:42Z 2024-09-23T08:46:42Z 2009-05 journal article Wu, Chuan et al. “Endothelial basement membrane laminin alpha5 selectively inhibits T lymphocyte extravasation into the brain.” Nature medicine vol. 15,5 (2009): 519-27. doi:10.1038/nm.1957 https://hdl.handle.net/10481/94855 10.1038/nm.1957 eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ open access Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional Nature