Do All Antigen-Presenting Cells Migrate to Lymph Nodes?

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Antigen-presenting cells, including macrophages and dendritic cells, play a crucial role in immune response by processing and presenting antigens. Dendritic cells are known to migrate to lymph nodes after encountering antigens, driven by specific signals that enhance their adhesion and movement. In contrast, macrophages, which differentiate from circulating monocytes, primarily function in phagocytosis rather than actively migrating to lymph nodes. While macrophages possess antigen-presenting capabilities, they typically do not rely on migrating to lymph nodes for this purpose and may remain in tissues, interacting with T and B cells locally rather than seeking them out in lymph nodes. The exact signals prompting these movements in both cell types are still under investigation.
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Antigen-presenting cells...

When antigen-presenting cells (eg - macrophages, dendritics, etc) encounter antigens, do they all migrate to the lymph nodes? What causes them to do this?

I know from sources I've read that dendrites do it, but do macrophages as well - or does the macrophage system rely on ones which are alread present in the nodes? Or do they just move around randomly in tissues, hoping to bump into a T / B cell? I can't seem to ifnd a detailed and clear site anywhere on the net! :confused:

Thanks in advance. :smile:
 
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Cheman said:
When antigen-presenting cells (eg - macrophages, dendritics, etc) encounter antigens, do they all migrate to the lymph nodes? What causes them to do this?
Scientists are trying to find out what exactly the signal is, I think it is the same type of system that causes monocytes to move into tissues where they are needed: a signal cause them to become sticky for the site, so they have the time to enter.

I know from sources I've read that dendrites do it, but do macrophages as well - or does the macrophage system rely on ones which are alread present in the nodes? Or do they just move around randomly in tissues, hoping to bump into a T / B cell? I can't seem to ifnd a detailed and clear site anywhere on the net! :confused:

Thanks in advance. :smile:
Well, monocytes circulate in the blood until they move into tissue, where they differentiate into macrophages. A macrophage has antigen presenting abilities, but that is not its major function. Macrophages recognize particles opsonized by the immune system and they phagocytose those, I don't think they are recruited to the lymph nodes.
 
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