- Source: Sentinel cell
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Sentinel cells refer to cells in the body's first line of defense, which embed themselves in tissues such as skin.
Sentinel cells represent diverse array of cell types with the capability to monitor the presence of exogenous or potentially harmful particles and play a crucial role in recognizing and sampling signs of infection or abnormal cellular activity and/or death. Encountering such stimuli is initiating the innate immune response. Their ability to recognize injurious or dangerous material is mediated by specialized pattern recognition receptors (PRR) and possess specialized function to prime naive T cells upon pathogen recognition.
Sentinel cells can refer to specific antigen-presenting cells, such as:
Macrophages
Kupffer cells - in the liver
Langerhans cells - in the skin and mucosa (*these are a form of dendritic cells)
Alveolar macrophages - in the lungs
Microglia - in the brain
Dendritic cells
Sentinel cells can also refer to cells that are normally not specialized antigen-presenting cells such as:
Mast cells
Specialized T cells
Sometimes tissue cells not part of the immune system such as are also referred to as Sentinel cells:
Fibroblasts
Epithelial cells
Location
Typically, dendritic cells (DCs) and macrophages serve this function by being strategically distributed throughout diverse tissues within host environment particularly in those regions exposed to the contact with the external environment such as mucosal tissues and skin.
Function
In elucidating the intricate network of phenotypic markers characterizing sentinel cells residing in skin there is a recent study offering an in-depth exploration whereas stimulus-specific gene expression and functions are described in the summarized article.
Use in science
Interestingly, novel function has been discovered by designing sentinel bacteria Bacillus subtilis combining the living organism with evolutionary function of sentinels resulting in surveillance of specific DNA sequences and reporting single nucleotide polymorphism associated with facial features through the mechanism by which these sentinel cells take up and record target DNA sequences, using CRISPR interference for SNP differentiation and expression of target gene. This technology demonstrates potential applications in areas like forensics, ecology, and epidemiology, by enabling the detection of specific DNA sequences in various environments. Application of such DNA-specific surveillance can be designed in detection of an anomaly and targeting the localized treatment to identified tissue such as tumor.