|
|
||||||||
Department of Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, CT 06030
The wavelike pattern of fetal T cell neogenesis is largely determined by the intermittent generation and exportation of waves of prothymocytes by the hemopoietic tissues in coordination with their gated importation by the thymus. Having previously shown that the importation of prothymocytes by the adult mouse thymus is also gated and that thymocytopoiesis proceeds in discrete (albeit overlapping) waves, we now demonstrate that prothymocytes are periodically exported in saturating numbers from the adult mouse bone marrow. Experiments in normal, radioablated, and parabiotic mice document the cyclical accumulation (35 wk) of prothymocytes in both the steady state and regenerating bone marrow, followed by their release into the blood
1 wk before intrathymic gate opening. The results also show that circulating donor-origin thymocyte precursors can transiently (
1 wk) establish high level chimerism in the bone marrow after the mobilization of endogenous prothymocytes, presumably by occupying vacated microenvironmental niches. Hence, by analogy with the fetal state, we posit the existence of a feedback loop whereby diffusible chemokines of thymic origin regulate the production and/or release of bone marrow prothymocytes during each period of thymic receptivity. Because each resulting wave of thymocytopoiesis is accompanied by a wave of intrathymic dendritic cell formation, these coordinated events may help to optimize thymocyte selection as well as production.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
K. Khosrotehrani, M. Leduc, V. Bachy, S. N. Huu, M. Oster, A. Abbas, S. Uzan, and S. Aractingi Pregnancy Allows the Transfer and Differentiation of Fetal Lymphoid Progenitors into Functional T and B Cells in Mothers J. Immunol., January 15, 2008; 180(2): 889 - 897. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
V. P. Zediak, I. Maillard, and A. Bhandoola Multiple prethymic defects underlie age-related loss of T progenitor competence Blood, August 15, 2007; 110(4): 1161 - 1167. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. H. Dallas, B. Varnum-Finney, P. J. Martin, and I. D. Bernstein Enhanced T-cell reconstitution by hematopoietic progenitors expanded ex vivo using the Notch ligand Delta1 Blood, April 15, 2007; 109(8): 3579 - 3587. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
F. J. Schnell, A. L. Zoller, S. R. Patel, I. R. Williams, and G. J. Kersh Early growth response gene 1 provides negative feedback to inhibit entry of progenitor cells into the thymus. J. Immunol., April 15, 2006; 176(8): 4740 - 4747. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. R. Ryan, R. Shepherd, J. K. Leavey, Y. Gao, F. Grassi, F. J. Schnell, W.-P. Qian, G. J. Kersh, M. N. Weitzmann, and R. Pacifici An IL-7-dependent rebound in thymic T cell output contributes to the bone loss induced by estrogen deficiency PNAS, November 15, 2005; 102(46): 16735 - 16740. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
H. T. Petrie and P. W. Kincade Many roads, one destination for T cell progenitors J. Exp. Med., July 5, 2005; 202(1): 11 - 13. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |