Duct-associated lymphoid tissue (DALT) of minor salivary glands and mucosal immunity
- PMID: 3512423
- PMCID: PMC1453952
Duct-associated lymphoid tissue (DALT) of minor salivary glands and mucosal immunity
Abstract
Minor salivary glands (MSG) play a substantial role in the secretory immunoglobulin A (sIgA)-mediated immunity of the oral cavity. There are two possibilities for the induction of this immunity: (i) an explicitly local antigenic stimulus, or (ii) a remote stimulus as part of the so-called 'common mucosal immune system'. This communication is an attempt to consolidate available evidence in support of both possibilities and to address the former in detail. Although there is strong circumstantial evidence supporting the feasibility of MSG functioning as a part of the common mucosal immune system, direct experimental evidence is yet to emerge. On the other hand, there is increasing structural and physiological evidence in support of MSG serving as a local immunological organ. The purely local response is attributed to the presence of MSG duct-associated lymphoid tissue (DALT), which is comparable to gut- or bronchial-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT or BALT) in origin, tissue organization and function. DALT is accessible to oral antigens by retrograde passage through MSG ducts. Repeated topical antigenic challenging via the oral mucosa may result in the appearance of interacinar plasma cells carrying specific homologous antibodies in MSG. Gut or enteric priming of the same antigen, by passing the oral mucosa by gastric intubation, need not evoke a remote immune response in MSG. Since DALT is more likely to occur in healthy, young growing individuals, who are less likely to undergo bioptic examination of MSG, it has not yet been documented in humans. The physiologically induced DALT is apt to be confused with focal accumulations of lymphoid tissue in pathologically altered MSG, as a consequence of local and some systemic autoimmune diseases. An attempt is made to demarcaate healthy and pathological MSG on the basis of currently available clinical, serological, immunological and genetic evidence.
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