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Department of Immunology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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The earliest precursor population to colonize the thymus contains
multipotent hematopoietic potential for both the lymphoid and myeloid
lineages (10, 11). These cells reside in the fetal thymic rudiment at
day 12 of gestation and are phenotypically and functionally similar to
HSCs (11, 12). However, between days 1214 of gestation, recoverable
myeloid potential within the most immature thymocyte population rapidly
diminishes (10), such that after day 13 of gestation and throughout
adult life, only lymphoid potential can be rescued intrathymically
(13, 14, 15, 16). This suggests that the characteristics of either the thymic
microenvironment or the thymus-colonizing precursors themselves change
during development. In keeping with this, the day 1112 fetal thymic
rudiment does not appear to be optimally capable of supporting
ß T
lymphopoiesis (12, 17). This indicates that there may be a delayed
functional maturation of the thymic microenvironment itself, which
includes its ability to efficiently induce lymphoid lineage commitment
of incoming precursors. Alternatively, there is also evidence in
support of cell-autonomous differentiation of developing hematopoietic
precursors. This includes the finding that full lymphohematopoietic
potential among HSCs appears to undergo maturation from a primitive
state to a definitive precursor during embryonic development (5, 6, 18). Furthermore, there is recent evidence that restricted common
lymphoid progenitors exist in adult bone marrow, suggesting that
similar precursors may develop during fetal ontogeny, and that these
cells may be predominantly responsible for mobilization and homing to
the thymus (19).
In any case, the most immature hematopoietic precursors common to the fetal and adult thymus appear to possess a lymphoid-restricted potential and are capable of giving rise to the B, T, NK, and lymphoid dendritic cell lineages (9, 15, 16, 20). Collectively termed thymic lymphoid progenitors (TLPs), these multipotent cells are characterized by high-level expression of CD117 (c-kit) and a lack of expression of hematopoietic lineage (Lin-) differentiation markers (9, 15, 16). Whether these cells comprise a homogeneous population of lymphoid-restricted precursors or represent a collection of phenotypically similar lineage-committed cells is unknown. However, we recently identified a stage in fetal thymic ontogeny, marked by coexpression of NK1.1 and CD117, which characterizes progenitors committed to the T and NK cell fates (16). Termed fetal TNK progenitors, cells at this stage are phenotypically similar to TLPs and may have been previously included among the TLP population (15). Upon reconstitution of alymphoid fetal thymic lobes in vitro, sorted NK1.1-/CD117+ TLPs and FL-derived hematopoietic precursors rapidly give rise to TNK progenitors (16), suggesting that the latter population is separated by a thymus-induced lineage commitment event. In an effort to further elucidate the requirements for progression to the TNK stage, we cultured fetal TLPs and FL-derived precursors with exogenous cytokine combinations in vitro. Surprisingly, fetal TLPs, but not FL-derived cells, were capable of efficiently and spontaneously up-regulating NK1.1 surface expression during short-term (48 h) in vitro culture, without a requirement for exogenous stimuli. This suggests that spontaneous progression to the TNK stage reflects a thymus-induced differentiation signal. Furthermore, this phenotypic change corresponds to a lineage commitment event to the T/NK cell fates. These findings indicate that the TLP population, although phenotypically homogeneous, contains functionally heterogeneous subsets of lineage-committed precursors. In this report, we investigate this phenomenon to gain insight into the requirements for commitment to the T/NK cell lineages from multipotent precursors.
| Materials and Methods |
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Timed-pregnant Swiss.NIH (Sw) and C57BL/6 mice were obtained from the National Cancer Institute, Frederick Cancer Research and Development Center (Frederick, MD).
Isolation of fetal cells
Fetal thymus (FT) and FL were harvested, washed three times in
5 ml complete medium (DMEM medium supplemented with 12% FCS, 2 mM
glutamine, 10 U/ml penicillin, 100 µg/ml streptomycin, 100 µg/ml
gentamicin, 110 µg/ml sodium pyruvate, 50 µM 2-ME, and 10 mM HEPES,
pH 7.4), and disrupted through 70-µm nylon mesh using a syringe
plunger. Viable cells were recovered by discontinuous density gradient
centrifugation over Lympholyte-Mammal (Cedar Lane, Hornby, Ontario,
Canada). CD24low/25- fetal cells were obtained
by Ab/complement-mediated lysis, as described previously (16). Briefly,
50200 µl of anti-CD24 (J11d.2) and anti-CD25 (7D4) culture
supernatant and a 1/10 dilution of Low-Tox rabbit complement (Cedar
Lane) were added to single-cell suspensions in 23 ml complete medium,
and cells were incubated at 37°C for 30 min. After incubation, viable
cells were recovered by discontinuous density gradient centrifugation
over Lympholyte-Mammal and washed before analysis.
Flow cytometric analysis and cell sorting
FITC-, phycoerythrin-, biotin-, and APC-conjugated mAbs, and
streptavidin-APC, were obtained from PharMingen (San Diego, CA). Cell
suspensions were stained in 50 µl staining buffer (HBSS, without
phenol red, plus 1% BSA and 0.05% NaN3) for 20 min on ice
and washed twice before analysis. Stained cells were analyzed with a
FACSCalibur flow cytometer using CellQuest software (Becton Dickinson,
Mountain View, CA); data was live-gated by forward/side light scatter
and lack of propidium iodide uptake. All plots display 10,000 events;
frequencies in each quadrant are given as percent of total in the upper
right corner. For cell sorting, single-cell suspensions were prepared
and stained for FACS as described above, except that no
NaN3 was added to staining buffer. Cells were sorted using
a Coulter Elite cytometer (Hialeah, FL); sorted cells were
99% pure,
as determined by postsort analysis.
In vitro cell culture
Sorted NK1.1-/CD117+ cells (on
ice) were washed twice and cultured in complete medium in 96-well
round-bottom plates at 104 to 5 x 105
cells/well at 37°C in a humidified incubator containing 5%
CO2. Where indicated, the cytokines IL-3, IL-6, IL-7, and
stem cell factor (SCF) were added (50 ng/ml each cytokine) to wells.
Cocultures with fibroblasts or OP9 cells were performed by adding
sorted precursors to wells containing confluent layers of stromal
cells. RNA polymerase II transcriptional inhibition was achieved by
adding
-amanitin (10 µg/ml) (Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis,
IN) to wells immediately before incubation at 37°C. Induction of CD25
surface expression in splenocytes following Con A activation (12 h) was
completely blocked with the addition of 10 µg/ml of
-amanitin
(data not shown). PMA (10 ng/ml) (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) and
ionomycin (1 ng/ml) (Sigma) were added immediately before incubation at
37°C.
RT-PCR
Single-cell suspensions prepared from total FL cells and
thymocytes were depleted of CD24high/25+ cells
before sorting for NK1.1-/CD117high (TLP, FL)
and NK1.1+/CD117- (NK) cells. Total RNA was
isolated using the Trizol RNA isolation protocol (Life Technologies,
Gaithersburg, MD). RNA was resuspended in 25 µl diethylpyrocarbonate
(DEPC)-treated (0.1%) dH2O. cDNA was prepared from 300 ng
of each RNA using random hexamer primers and the cDNA Cycle kit
(Invitrogen, San Diego, CA). Subsequent PCR analysis was performed on
an automated GeneAmp 9600 thermocycler (Perkin-Elmer, Norwalk, CT)
using 20 s denaturation at 94°C, 30 s annealing at 60°C,
and 1 min extensions at 72°C for 35 cycles, with a hot start at
94°C for 2 min and a final extension at 72°C for 6 min. PCR
reactions were performed using a 20-ng equivalent of each cDNA on the
same cDNA batches as shown for ß-actin, and all PCR products
correspond to the expected molecular sizes. Reverse transcriptase
reactions done in the absence of avian myeloblastosis virus reverse
transcriptase were included as controls. Gene-specific primers used for
PCR are as follows (5'
3'): ß-actin (5'), GAT GAC GAT ATC GCT GCG
CTG; ß-actin (3'), GTA CGA CCA GAG GCA TAC AGG; NKR-P1A/B/C (5'), AAG
GT(A/T) CAC ATT GCC AGA CAT; NKR-P1A (3'), GTA GAC ATG GCT CAG TGA TTG;
NKR-P1B (3'), GGA CAG GGG AGA GAT GGA GAT; NKR-P1C (3'), GAG TCA ACG
AAT GGA AAG GAA. Products were separated by agarose gel electrophoresis
on a 1.6% gel, and visualized by ethidium bromide staining; reverse
electronic photo images are shown.
5-(and 6-)-carboxyfluorescein diacetate succinimidyl ester (CFSE) vital dye labeling
CFSE (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) was a kind gift of Dr. Pamela Ohashi (Toronto, ON). Cells were labeled with CFSE, as previously described (21). Briefly, cells were washed in HBSS to remove protein, and resuspended in HBSS plus CFSE (final concentration, 0.5 µM; stock CFSE, 0.5 mM in DMSO). Cells were labeled for 10 min at 37°C, then washed three times in complete medium before culture. Control cultures for staining calibration and compensation were conducted in parallel by incubating cells at 4°C. After incubation, cells were prepared and analyzed by flow cytometry. Relative CFSE fluorescence was monitored in the FL1 parameter on a FACSCalibur flow cytometer.
Fetal thymic organ culture (FTOC) reconstitution
Lymphocyte-depleted thymic lobes were prepared by culturing day 15 fetal thymic lobes from timed-pregnant Sw mice in complete medium containing 1.0 mM deoxyguanosine (dG) for 5 days, as previously described (22, 23). Host dG-treated FTOCs were then cultured with medium for 1 day, then the lobes were rinsed twice, resuspended in 10 µl complete medium, and placed in Terasaki plates at two lobes (one thymus) per well. Donor cells (1 x 103 of each) were resuspended in 20 µl medium and added to dG-treated alymphoid fetal thymic lobes in Terasaki plates. After adding donor cells or complete medium alone, Terasaki plates were inverted ("hanging drop") and cultures were incubated at 37°C in a humidified incubator containing 5% CO2 for 24 h. Lobes were then transferred to standard FTOC for 12 days. Cell suspensions from reconstituted thymic lobes were analyzed by flow cytometry.
OP9 stromal cell line coculture
Sorted cell populations were prepared as described above and used in parallel with FTOC reconstitution assays. A total of 1 x 103 donor cells were cocultured in complete medium for 7 days on confluent monolayers (6-well plates) of OP9 cells (24) in the presence of IL-3, IL-6, IL-7, and SCF (50 ng/ml each). Cells were then stimulated on a fresh OP9 monolayer in IL-7 and IL-2 for an additional 6 days before harvesting for flow cytometry.
| Results |
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We recently identified a stage in fetal thymic ontogeny characterized by coexpression of NK1.1 and CD117, which marks the loss of precursor potential for B lymphocytes, while that for the T and NK cell fates is maintained (16). Early hematopoietic progenitors (NK1.1-/CD117+) in the FT and FL rapidly differentiate to the NK1.1+/CD117+ TNK stage after exposure to fetal thymic stroma in FTOC. To investigate the effects of cytokines on the survival and differentiation of early precursor thymocytes, we cultured sorted precursors under conditions shown to maintain precursor multipotency in vitro (20). We have previously demonstrated that sorted TNK (NK1.1+/CD117+) progenitors cultured under these conditions do not undergo further differentiation in vitro, unless cocultured with bone marrow-derived stromal cells to induce commitment to the NK lineage (16). However, the effects of culture on the TLP population remain unknown.
Fig. 1
shows NK1.1 vs CD117 expression on
sorted NK1.1-/CD117+ fetal thymocytes (TLPs)
and FL precursors before and after in vitro culture in the presence of
exogenous IL-3, IL-6, IL-7, and SCF, as previously described (20).
Strikingly, almost half of sorted fetal thymocytes spontaneously
up-regulate NK1.1 expression after 48 h under these conditions
(Fig. 1
b, FT). This effect is common to two NK1.1-expressing
strains of mice, as revealed by comparison of Sw and C57BL/6 thymocytes
(Fig. 1
b, Sw vs B6, respectively). In contrast, sorted FL
precursors from each of these strains remain predominantly
NK1.1- upon similar culture (Fig. 1
b, FL).
Nevertheless, we previously demonstrated that a subset of FL precursors
does up-regulate NK1.1 expression after exposure to thymic stroma in
FTOC (16). Taken together, these findings suggest that differentiation
to the NK1.1+/CD117+ TNK stage is induced by
either prior or continued exposure to the fetal thymic
microenvironment. Thus, expression of NK1.1 in vitro may represent a
delayed but passive progression to a developmental stage that reflects
the receipt of a differentiation signal in vivo. Alternatively, this
phenomenon might represent a default pathway of T/NK lymphocyte
differentiation, which may be actively induced in the absence of an
environment efficiently capable of supporting T lineage commitment and
differentiation. As up-regulation of NK1.1 expression on TLPs was
substantial within 48 h culture ex vivo, we investigated the
kinetics further in an attempt to delineate between these
possibilities.
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To examine the temporal requirements for NK1.1 expression on
precursor thymocytes, we assessed their phenotype at different
intervals under conditions identical to those in Fig. 1
B. As
shown in Fig. 1
c, surface expression of NK1.1 on sorted TLPs
becomes evident as early as 16 h after removal from the thymus.
Furthermore, the majority of thymocytes up-regulate NK1.1 surface
expression within 48 h, with only a moderate increase after this
time point. Importantly, the maintenance of a subset of precursors with
a TLP phenotype, even after 6 days in vitro, indicates that not all
thymocytes undergo differentiation in vitro. Similarly, up-regulation
of NK1.1 does not occur at any time point on FL-derived precursors,
indicating that this effect is specific to only a subset of fetal
thymocytes. Taken together, these rapid and specific kinetics of
differentiation may indicate that only a subset of fetal thymocyte
precursors have received an irreversible signal to differentiate and
that the effect of this signal is manifest in phenotype over the
short-term culture period. Alternatively, due to the distinct lineage
potential of the precursor populations involved (16), the conditions of
culture might be directly affecting the fetal thymocytes in a
differential manner from FL precursors. To address this, we cultured
these two precursor subsets under various culture conditions, ranging
from minimal survival requirements to a bone marrow-derived stromal
coculture environment strongly supportive of B and NK lymphoid
differentiation (16, 25).
Spontaneous up-regulation of NK1.1 on precursor thymocytes represents a cell fate predetermined by exposure to fetal thymic stroma
Although the combination of IL-3, IL-6, IL-7, and SCF have been
shown previously to augment proliferation of the earliest
CD117+ thymic precursors and maintain their precursor
potential in vitro, the effect of these cytokines on the overall
phenotype was not determined (20). Nonetheless, in agreement with our
observations, these studies indicated that SCF, the ligand for CD117,
appears to be necessary for the survival of these progenitors when
cultured in isolation (20, 26). Therefore, we tested whether
up-regulation of NK1.1 after 48 h in vitro occurred in the
presence of SCF alone. Fig. 2
shows that
there was little difference in NK1.1 up-regulation on cultured fetal
thymocytes and FL precursors whether cultured in SCF alone (Fig. 2
, SCF) or in the presence of SCF plus IL-3, IL-6, and IL-7 (Fig. 2
, SCF +
IL-3,6,7). Thus, as previously shown (20), these cytokines do not
appear to have a differentiation-inducing effect on these precursors in
vitro. In keeping with this, CD117+ FL cells obtained from
several different days of gestation (days 1214) and cultured with
various cytokine cocktails for
8 days showed no significant
up-regulation of NK1.1 expression (data not shown).
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Initiation of NK1.1 transcription occurs in vivo
Spontaneous up-regulation of NK1.1 on precursor thymocytes appears
to be a predetermined cell fate, which occurs within the thymic
microenvironment during the course of normal lineage commitment.
However, initiation of NK1.1 expression might occur in vitro simply as
a consequence of removing these cells from the thymus and culturing
them in isolation. In the latter case, NK1.1 expression might reflect
the induction of a default pathway of differentiation. To distinguish
between these possibilities, we examined NK1.1 expression at the
transcriptional level using the RNA polymerase II inhibitor,
-amanitin, to block nascent transcription of mRNA in vitro. As a
control, Con A-stimulated splenocytes treated with
-amanitin showed
a complete block in the induction of CD25 surface expression (data not
shown). Fig. 3
a shows fetal
thymocytes and FL precursors cultured for 24 h without (Fig. 3
a, 24-h control) and with (Fig. 3
a, 24 h +
-amanitin) pharmacological blockade of transcription. A 24-h time
point was used due to the toxicity resulting from global
transcriptional repression for longer time periods. Although
-amanitin treatment reduced both the fraction of NK1.1+
thymocytes and NK1.1 expression levels significantly (approximately
50%, Fig. 3
a), it failed to completely block this
induction, suggesting that at least a subset of thymocytes contained
pre-existing transcripts for NKR-P1C (CD161), a ligand for the
anti-NK1.1 mAb (27). To investigate this further, we employed
RT-PCR on thymocytes fresh ex vivo.
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We next determined whether up-regulation of NK1.1 on precursor
thymocytes could be mimicked by mitogenic activation of these cells.
Pharmacological treatment using phorbol ester and calcium ionophore
induces expression of CD25 to high levels on precursor thymocytes,
mimicking progression to the pro-T cell stage (14). A similar effect is
induced upon treatment of these cells with the cytokines, TNF-
and
IL-1
(14). Interestingly, these treatments fail to augment CD25
expression on FL precursors (J.R.C. and J.C.Z.-P., unpublished
observations). Therefore, we tested the effect of these treatments on
NK1.1 expression in these cells. Treatment of sorted fetal thymocytes
and FL cells with PMA and ionomycin only had a marginal effect on NK1.1
expression (Fig. 3
c, 24h + PMA/iono; compare Fig. 3
a, control). Furthermore, treatment with TNF-
and
IL-1
had no significant effect (data not shown). Minimally, these
data indicate that CD25 and NK1.1 expression are regulated by distinct
pathways in precursor thymocytes, and that NK1.1 up-regulation is not
due to generalized activation, at least that mediated through protein
kinase C and Ca2+ flux.
The kinetic data presented in Fig. 1
c suggest that the
majority of thymocyte precursors up-regulate expression within 48
h after removal from the thymus and that a substantial subset remains
NK1.1- in longer culture. This suggests that a subset of
fetal thymocyte precursors, possibly those which have not received a
thymic signal, are analogous to FL precursors. To test this, we
cultured fetal thymocytes ex vivo for 48 h, then resorted the
NK1.1- fraction and retested their propensity for NK1.1
up-regulation in vitro thereafter. As shown in Fig. 3
d, over
90% of these cells remained NK1.1- over the next 72
h (compare Fig. 3
d with Fig. 1
c). This lends
further support to the notion that up-regulation of NK1.1 on thymocyte
precursors represents a delayed phenotypic change in response to a
signal received intrathymically in vivo.
Spontaneous up-regulation of NK1.1 represents a differentiation event and is not due to outgrowth of NK1.1+ cells
Due to the large percentage of NK1.1+ precursors that
appear after culture, it is possible that they represent the outgrowth
of a small number of differentiating cells. To test this, we sorted
fresh thymocytes ex vivo for an NK1.1-/CD117+
phenotype and labeled them in vitro with the vital dye, CFSE, before
culture. CFSE is a fluorescent membrane-localizing dye partitioned
evenly into daughter cells upon division, and it allows the
visualization of proliferating cells by revealing twofold stepwise
decreases in green fluorescence detectable by flow cytometry (21). Fig. 4
shows fetal thymocytes and FL
precursors cultured for 48 h after CFSE labeling. Cells cultured
at 4°C, and thus prevented from proliferating, displayed no apparent
loss in fluorescence intensity (Fig. 4
, top panel). This
data also indicates that both sets of progenitors were labeled with
equal efficiency. However, when cultured at 37°C, FL precursors were
found to divide more rapidly than the majority of fetal thymocytes, as
indicated by their lower relative fluorescence (Fig. 4
, middle
panel). However, when cultured thymocytes were gated according to
their NK1.1 phenotype, NK1.1- precursors were found to
divide at a rate similar to FL cells, while the NK1.1+
subset divided approximately one cell division less overall (Fig. 4
, bottom panel). This indicates that the NK1.1+
fetal thymocyte subset does not outgrow in culture, rather these cells
undergo a differentiation event that appears to slow their
proliferation relative to the NK1.1- fraction.
|
We previously demonstrated that
NK1.1+/CD117+ thymocytes sorted fresh ex vivo
are capable of generating T and NK cells, but lack potential for B
lymphocytes in lineage reconstitution assays (16). Furthermore,
NK1.1-/CD117+ TLPs are capable of giving rise
to all three lineages. Therefore, to determine whether spontaneous
up-regulation of NK1.1 in vitro recapitulated in vivo lineage
commitment, we tested the lymphocyte potential of cultured TLPs
subdivided according to their NK1.1 phenotype. Fig. 5
a shows the gates used to
sort purified TLPs cultured for 48 h in vitro. Reconstitution of
dG-depleted FTOCs with both the NK1.1+ (Fig. 5
a,
R1) and NK1.1- (Fig. 5
A, R2) subsets resulted
in the generation of both CD3high T cells and
NK1.1+ NK cells (Fig. 5
b). As previously
demonstrated ex vivo (16), T lineage progeny consisted of both immature
CD4/CD8 double-positive and mature single-positive conventional T
cells, while NK cells lacked expression of CD3
and TCR-
ß (data
not shown). DNA isolated from sorted T lineage cells also possessed D-J
rearrangements at the TCR-ß loci, while that from NK cells was
retained in the germline TCR-ß configuration (data not shown). Thus,
both populations possess potential for T and NK cells in FTOC.
|
| Discussion |
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Our data indicate that even though the TLPs appear to be phenotypically
homogeneous, they contain a functionally heterogeneous mixture of cells
with distinct precursor potential. This functional heterogeneity is
revealed phenotypically in a delayed manner upon short-term culture of
these precursors under conditions that maintain their proliferation and
survival in vitro (
Figs. 13![]()
![]()
). In particular, the majority of TLPs
cultured in isolation, with at least exogenous SCF, efficiently and
spontaneously induces NK1.1 expression ex vivo within 48 h. The
subset of cultured TLPs that remains NK1.1- in vitro
retains multipotent lymphoid precursor potential for the T, NK, and B
lineages, while the NK1.1+ precursors are restricted to the
T and NK lineages (Fig. 5
). Thus, up-regulation of NK1.1 surface
expression in vitro corresponds to a bona fide lineage commitment event
analogous to that observed for the phenotypically identical TNK stage
in vivo.
Spontaneous up-regulation of NK1.1 in vitro appears to represent a cell
fate predetermined by exposure to the thymic microenvironment. This is
supported by the fact that this effect is specific to fetal thymocyte
precursors and does not efficiently occur with FL cells, unless the
latter are cocultured with fetal thymic stroma in FTOC, in which case
the majority of FL-derived cells pass through a NK1.1+
stage (16). Moreover, induction of NK1.1 expression on thymocytes is
minimally affected by transcriptional blockade, mitogen-induced
activation, or exposure to exogenous cytokines of stromal cells (Figs. 2
and 3
). Indeed, transcripts for the NKR-P1 (CD161) family members
(28), of which NKR-P1C represents a ligand for the anti-NK1.1 mAb
(27), were detected among sorted NK1.1- TLPs fresh ex
vivo. This suggests that at least a subset of these cells was already
destined to express surface NK1.1. Furthermore, expression of NK1.1 in
vitro was found to correlate with reduced proliferation, compared with
the remaining NK1.1- counterpart (Fig. 4
). This reduced
cell turnover suggests that the NK1.1+ cells undergo a
differentiation event during culture, which is consistent with their
restricted lineage potential (Fig. 5
).
Taken together, these data suggest that a subset of TLPs has already
received a thymus-induced signal that results in lineage commitment,
while the remaining fraction has not yet received this signal, despite
their residency within the thymus. This signal, in turn, could
represent either a direct commitment event to the TNK stage or a T
lineage commitment event that does not preclude a default developmental
pathway for NK cell potential. The difference between these two
possibilities may depend on whether the NK1.1 subset was destined to
express NK1.1 in vivo, or whether this subset would have followed a
different developmental pathway if not removed from the thymic
microenvironment. Notably, the phenomenon of spontaneous up-regulation
in vitro is specific to NK1.1 and CD16/32 (data not shown), as
induction of CD25 to a similar extent does not occur (data not shown).
Thus, either the duration of this normally transient NK1.1+
stage is proportionately pronounced in the absence of continued thymic
influence, or this phenomenon represents a default pathway before the
pro-T stage of development that occurs upon removal from an environment
capable of efficiently inducing T lineage commitment. Nonetheless, the
interpretation remains that the majority of multipotent TLPs, en route
to becoming committed T lineage precursors, undergo lineage commitment
to a stage which does not preclude differentiation to either of the T
or NK lineages. Therefore, the TNK phenotype seems to represent a true
cellular commitment pathway induced by thymic stroma. Interestingly,
however, this stage in not thymus-dependent, as phenotypically and
functionally identical precursors are found in the fetal circulation
(32, 33). In addition, a small subset (12%) of FL precursors also
spontaneously up-regulates NK1.1 surface expression (
Figs. 13![]()
![]()
),
indicating that the thymus is not strictly required for this event.
Our findings characterize a lineage commitment pathway common to T and NK lineage precursors. Whether this pathway represents the predominant course of T and NK cell precursor potential in vivo or an alternative, default pathway for T and NK cell development remains unknown. However, the ability of precursor thymocytes to spontaneously undergo delayed lineage commitment in vitro highlights a caveat in assays of precursor activity, in that even a phenotypically homogeneous population of cells may be functionally heterogeneous. Thus, single-cell assays may represent the only unambiguous means of determining lineage potential.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Juan Carlos Zúñiga-Pflücker, Department of Immunology, Medical Sciences Building, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, M5S 1A8, Canada; E-mail address: ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: HSC, hematopoietic stem cell; B6, C57BL/6; CFSE, 5-(and 6-)-carboxyfluorescein diacetate succinimidyl ester; dG, deoxyguanosine; FL, fetal liver; FT, fetal thymus; FTOC, fetal thymic organ culture; SCF, stem cell factor; Sw, Swiss.NIH; TLP, thymic lymphoid progenitor; TNK, T/NK cell progenitor. ![]()
Received for publication June 11, 1998. Accepted for publication August 21, 1998.
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and IL-1
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G. Balciunaite, R. Ceredig, and A. G. Rolink The earliest subpopulation of mouse thymocytes contains potent T, significant macrophage, and natural killer cell but no B-lymphocyte potential Blood, March 1, 2005; 105(5): 1930 - 1936. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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B. Ljutic, J. R. Carlyle, and J. C. Zuniga-Pflucker Identification of Upstream cis-Acting Regulatory Elements Controlling Lineage-specific Expression of the Mouse NK Cell Activation Receptor, NKR-P1C J. Biol. Chem., August 22, 2003; 278(34): 31909 - 31917. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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D. L. Foss, E. Donskoy, and I. Goldschneider Functional demonstration of intrathymic binding sites and microvascular gates for prothymocytes in irradiated mice Int. Immunol., March 1, 2002; 14(3): 331 - 338. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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R. Ceredig The ontogeny of B cells in the thymus of normal, CD3{varepsilon} knockout (KO), RAG-2 KO and IL-7 transgenic mice Int. Immunol., January 1, 2002; 14(1): 87 - 99. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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L. M. Spain, A. Guerriero, S. Kunjibettu, and E. W. Scott T Cell Development in PU.1-Deficient Mice J. Immunol., September 1, 1999; 163(5): 2681 - 2687. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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