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Department of Immunology, Imperial College of Science and Medicine at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, London, United Kingdom
| Abstract |
|---|
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|
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-chain
rearrangement. Both IL-7 and stem cell factor (SCF) have dominant roles
at this stage of triple negative (TN) thymocyte development. Because
there is no age-associated decrease in the number of
CD44+CD25-CD3-CD4-CD8-
cells, this study investigated whether alterations in apoptosis within
the TN pathway accounted for diminishing thymocyte numbers with age.
Here we show significant age-associated increases in apoptotic TN
thymocytes, specifically within CD44+CD25+ and
CD44-CD25+ subpopulations, known to be the
location of TCR
-chain rearrangement. IL-7 added to TN cultures
established from old mice significantly both reduces apoptosis and
increases the percentage of live cells within
CD44+CD25+ and
CD44-CD25+ subpopulations after 24 h,
with prosurvival effects remaining after 5 days. SCF failed to
demonstrate prosurvival effects in old or young cultures, and IL-7 and
SCF together did not improve upon IL-7 alone. IL-7R expression did not
decline with age, ruling out the possibility that the age-associated
increase in apoptosis was attributed to reduced IL-7R expression.
Compared with PBS, treatment of old mice with IL-7 produced significant
increases in live TN cells. By comparison, treatment with SCF failed to
increase live TN numbers, and IL-7 and SCF together failed to
significantly improve thymopoiesis above that shown by IL-7 alone.
Thus, treatment with IL-7 alone can reverse the age-associated defect
in TN thymocyte development revealed by in vitro studies to be located
at the stages of TCR
-chain rearrangement. | Introduction |
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Stem cells from the bone marrow continually supply the thymus well into
old age (7, 8). The 
T cells are produced through a
series of developmental steps involving survival, proliferation, and
differentiation of these stem cell precursors driven by cell-cell
interactions, growth factors, and cytokines provided by the thymic
microenvironment (9, 10). In the adult mouse thymus, the
earliest precursors of the T cell pathway are within the population
defined phenotypically as
CD3-CD4lowCD8-
(11). Because CD4 knockout mice show normal progression
through this early phase of T cell development, the expression of CD4
does not appear to have a fundamental role; therefore, these early
precursors can be considered functionally triple negative
(TN)3
(12). This TN population has been subdivided on the basis
of expression of CD44 and CD25, with the most immature stage of
development identified with the phenotype
CD44+CD25- TN
(13). The following stage is defined by acquisition of
CD25 and represents a highly proliferating population
(14). The subsequent loss of CD44 expression is
accompanied by extensive TCR
-chain rearrangement (15).
The TCR
-chain forms and associates with an invariant pre-T
molecule forming the pre-TCR complex (16). This pre-TCR
complex drives expansion via the
CD44-CD25+ TN through the
CD44-CD25- TN stage to
the CD4+CD8+
double-positive stage (17).
Analysis of aged mice reveals that there is a bottleneck in thymocyte
production between the multipotent stem cell progenitor stage
(CD44+CD25- TN) and their
progeny (CD44+CD25+ TN)
that have become committed to the T cell lineage. The number of
CD44+CD25- TN thymocytes
does not alter with age; however, all subsequent subsets show markedly
reduced numbers. This, along with evidence from
F5-transgenic mice and recombination-activating
gene (RAG)-/-
F5-transgenic mice, suggests that this
age-associated decline in commitment to the T cell lineage is a result
of problems with rearrangement of the TCR
-chain
(18).
IL-7 is a cytokine provided by the thymic cortical epithelial cells,
and interaction with the IL-7R is important for TN cell development
(19, 20). Evidence suggests that the decline in IL-7
expression may limit thymocyte development by restricting combinations
of survival, proliferation, and rearrangement of the TCR
-chain
(reviewed in Ref. 21). Stem cell factor (SCF) is also
present in the thymus, produced by stromal cells (20) as a
transmembrane protein on the stromal cell surface and as a secreted
soluble molecule generated by differential splicing (22).
Interactions between SCF and c-kit also play a major role in
TN thymocyte development and have been shown to promote the
proliferation of immature thymocytes in vivo (23).
Thymopoiesis is limited in IL-7-/-,
IL-7R
-/-,
IL-7R
-/-, and
c-kit-/- mice (24, 25, 26, 27), and
c-kit-/-common
-chain
(
c)-/- mice
demonstrate complete abrogation of T cell development
(27). The reduced development of the early stages of T
cell development observed in IL-7-/-,
IL-7R
-/-,
IL-7R
-/-, and
c-kit-/- mice is similar to that seen
with aging. Clearly, both IL-7 and SCF have an important role in the
early stages of the developmental pathway, and both may be required to
renew thymopoiesis in old animals.
Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate whether age-associated alterations in TN survival could account for the decline in thymocyte numbers with age and identify the effect of IL-7 and SCF on the survival of TN cells from aged mice. Finally, this paper investigated the effect of IL-7 and SCF therapy on TN survival in vivo and their impact on thymopoiesis in aged mice.
| Materials and Methods |
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Normal C57BL/10 mice were obtained from Harlan Olac (Oxfordshire, U.K.) and were maintained in the animal house at the Imperial College School of Medicine in accordance with local rules and regulations.
Purification and culture of CD3-CD4-CD8- (TN) thymocytes from young and old mice
Young (23 mo) or old (2226 mo) mice were sacrificed by CO2 asphyxiation, their thymi were removed, and thymocyte cell suspensions were prepared by pressing the tissue through a 100-µm cell strainer (Becton Dickinson, Oxford, U.K.) into RPMI 1640 medium (Life Technologies, Paisley, U.K.) supplemented with 10% FCS (Sigma, Dorset, U.K.). Erythrocytes were lysed using Ortholyse (Ortho, Amersham, U.K.), and the total thymocyte number was counted using a hemocytometer.
Thymocytes were incubated for 15 min at 612°C with primary Abs; anti-CD3-biotin (clone KT3; Serotec, Oxford, U.K.), anti-CD4 (clone YTS 191.1; Serotec), anti-CD8 (clone YTS 169.4; a kind gift of Dr. B. Roser, Anglia Polytecnic University, Cambridge, U.K.), anti-CD19 (clone 6D5; Serotec), and F4/80 (clone C1:A3-1; Serotec) at a concentration of 1 µg/106 cells in ice-cold MACS buffer (5 mM EDTA, 1% BSA in PBS). Cells were washed in MACS buffer and then indirectly labeled with goat anti-rat IgG MACS microbeads and streptavidin MACS microbeads (Miltenyi Biotec, Bisley, U.K.) for 15 min at 4°C and then negatively selected on a MACS system. The CD3-CD4-CD8- (TN) thymocytes were counted and resuspended in RPMI 1640 medium (Life Technologies) supplemented with 10% FCS (Sigma), L-glutamine (200 mM), penicillin (100 IU/ml), streptomycin (100 µg/ml) (Sigma), and 5 x 10-5 M 2-ME (Life Technologies). TN thymocytes (12 x 105 cells/200 µl) were cultured at 37°C in a 96-well U-bottom plate (Greiner Labortechnik, Glos, U.K.) in the presence of either PBS, IL-7, SCF, or both IL-7 and SCF (PeproTech EC, London, U.K.). Titration experiments were performed showing the percentage of live cells with IL-7 or SCF within a 0500 ng/ml concentration range, and a concentration of 50 ng/ml, a concentration previously used by Kim (28), was shown to be mid-plateau for IL-7. SCF did not improve the percentage of live cells from control experiments at any concentration within this range; therefore, 50 ng/ml was chosen for convenience.
Analysis of apoptosis and IL-7R expression within TN cultures from young and old mice
For the analysis of apoptosis within the TN thymocyte subpopulations, a four-color FACS analysis was performed at 0 h, 24 h, and 5 days of culture. Cells were harvested, washed, resuspended in PBS, and stained with anti-CD44-APC (clone IM-7; PharMingen, Oxford, U.K.), anti-CD25-R-PE (clone AMT-13; Sigma), and control Abs conjugated to APC and R-PE (PharMingen) for 20 min on ice. Cells were washed and resuspended in annexin V binding buffer (PharMingen) and stained with annexin V-FITC and 7-amino actinomycin D (7-AAD) viability probe (PharMingen) for 15 min at room temperature in the dark. Cells were analyzed on a Becton Dickinson FACSCalibur within 1 h on a program acquiring 10,000 cells.
For analysis of IL-7R expression, four-color FACS analysis was
performed immediately post-TN purification. Cells were washed,
resuspended in PBS, and stained with anti-CD44-CyChrome (clone
IM-7; PharMingen), anti-CD25-FITC (clone AMT-13; Sigma),
anti-IL-7R
-biotin (Research Diagnostics, Flanders, NJ),
streptavidin-R-PE (Serotec), and control Abs conjugated to CyChrome,
FITC, and biotin (PharMingen) for 20 min on ice. Cells were washed in
PBS, resuspended in 1% paraformaldehyde, and analyzed on a Becton
Dickinson FACSCalibur within 5 days of fixation on a program acquiring
10,000 cells. All results were analyzed with WinMDI v.2.7 (Scripps
Research Institute, La Jolla, CA).
Treatment of old mice with IL-7 and SCF
Groups of male mice aged 2223 mo were injected s.c. once a day with one of the following treatment regimens: 1) 1 µg of carrier-free recombinant murine IL-7 (R&D Systems Europe, Oxford, U.K.) per day (an approximate concentration of 25 µg/kg/day) in PBS, representing a per diem dose similar to that used previously (29); 2) 4 µg of carrier-free recombinant murine SCF (PeproTech EC) per day (an approximate concentration of 100 µg/kg/day) in PBS, a dose used previously (30); 3) 1 µg IL-7 and 4 µg SCF per day in PBS; and 4) PBS alone. This regimen was followed for 4 days, and on day 5 the animals were sacrificed and the thymi were removed and analyzed.
Purification of apoptotic thymocytes from IL-7- and SCF-treated old mice
Mice were sacrificed, thymi were removed, and thymocytes were counted as described above. Apoptotic cells were selected using the annexin V microbead apoptotic cell isolation kit (Miltenyi Biotec, Bisley, U.K.) according to the manufacturers instructions. For the analysis of the TN thymocyte subpopulation, cells were stained with biotin-conjugated anti-CD4 (clone KT6), biotin-conjugated anti-CD3 (clone KT3), streptavidin conjugated to R-PE, anti-CD8-PE (clone 53-6.7), anti-CD44-CyChrome (clone IM7), and anti-CD25-FITC (clone7D4). Control Abs were conjugated to PE, FITC, biotin, or CyChrome. Cells were fixed poststaining with 1% paraformaldehyde in PBS and analyzed on a Becton Dickinson FACSCalibur within 5 days of fixation on a program acquiring 50,000 cells. The results were analyzed using WinMDI v.2.7 (Scripps Research Institute). The number of live cells in each TN subpopulation was calculated by subtracting the number of apoptotic cells from the total number of each subpopulation.
Statistical analysis
Comparison of samples was conducted using a two-tailed t test for samples with unequal variance using Microsoft Excel software (Redmond, WA). Differences were considered significant for p < 0.05.
| Results |
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To establish whether an increase in apoptosis within the TN
pathway occurs with age, TN thymocytes were purified from young and old
thymi and identified as follows. Apoptotic cells were detected by
binding annexin V to their plasma membrane, live cells by exclusion of
annexin V and 7-AAD and dead cells by binding annexin V and 7-AAD. As
shown in Fig. 1
, there was a significant
increase in the percentage of apoptotic TN thymocytes with age. To
identify whether this increase could be attributed to a particular
stage in TN development, the apoptotic profile within each of the four
TN subpopulations was analyzed. Fig. 2
reveals that only the apoptotic profile of the
CD44+CD25+ and
CD44-CD25+ subpopulations
significantly differed between young and old animals. The
CD44+CD25+ and
CD44-CD25+ populations
demonstrated a significant age-associated decrease in live cells and an
increase in apoptotic cells, thus locating the age-associated increase
in apoptosis to the stages of the TN pathway associated with initiation
of TCR
-chain rearrangement.
|
|
To examine whether this age-associated increase in apoptosis could
be reversed with cytokines known to have a central role at this stage
of thymocyte development, TN thymocytes from young and old donors were
cultured with IL-7, SCF, or a combination of IL-7 and SCF for 1 and 5
days. Fig. 3
reveals that TN cells from
both young and old donors were protected from apoptosis in the presence
of IL-7 after 24 h, with protection clearly still evident after 5
days in culture. Cultures with IL-7 established from young donors
showed significant increases in live TN cells at 1
(p < 0.05) and 5 days
(p < 0.01). This was paralleled by significant
decreases in total annexin V+ (cells that have
entered apoptosis or died via apoptosis) TN cells at both time points.
Cultures established from young donors with IL-7 in combination with
SCF also showed significant increases in live TN cells at both time
points. This again was paralleled by significant decreases in total
annexin V+ TN cells at both time points. Cultures
established from old donors followed this same pattern at both time
points. However, analysis of both young and old reveals that IL-7 and
SCF together did not significantly improve upon IL-7 alone, and culture
with SCF alone had no detectable antiapoptotic effect. Tables I
and II
show the percentage of live TN and annexin V+ TN
cells for all individual experiments and clearly demonstrate that all
IL-7 cultures show this increase in live TN and decrease in annexin
V+ cells compared with control cultures.
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Because culturing with SCF did not differ from culturing with PBS,
and a combination of IL-7 and SCF did not differ from IL-7 alone, we
have displayed the pattern of apoptosis within the four TN
subpopulations in IL-7 and control cultures after 24 h as examples
of each to establish whether the prosurvival effect of IL-7 could be
located to a certain stage of TN thymocyte development. Fig. 4
reveals that IL-7 added to cultures of
TN cells from both young and old animals reduced the percentage of
apoptotic cells and increased the number of live cells in all four
subpopulations. Most notably, a significant decrease in apoptosis and a
significant increase in live cells was observed after 24 h in
culture in the CD44+CD25+
and CD44-CD25+ TN
populations in old animals, earlier revealed as the location of the
age-associated increase in apoptosis. Although young donors revealed an
increase in live cells at the
CD44+CD25+ and
CD44-CD25+ TN stages,
unlike the old, these values were not significant. Young donors showed
significant increases in live cells at the
CD44+CD25- and
CD44-CD25- stages only.
SCF did not demonstrate detectable antiapoptotic effects on any of the
four subpopulations, and IL-7 and SCF together did not differ from
culture with IL-7 alone (data not shown).
|
|
To establish whether the age-associated increase in apoptosis
within the TN compartment was the result of reduced IL-7R expression,
TN from young (n = 6) and old mice (n =
6) were examined for IL-7R
-chain expression. The percentage of
CD44+CD25- TN thymocytes
expressing the IL-7R was 58 ± 7% in young and 74 ± 6% in
old mice, revealing a significant increase in expression with age
(p < 0.01). Expression in
CD44+CD25+ TN thymocytes
was 39 ± 20% in young and 61 ± 22% in old mice. Although
expression in this population is 1.5 times higher in old animals, this
was not significant (p = 0.09). Expression
within the CD44-CD25+ and
CD44-CD25- populations
did not significantly change with age (22 ± 19% and 15 ±
10% in young, 20 ± 15% and 10 ± 4% in old mice). This
result reveals that a decline in IL-7R expression is not responsible
for the age-associated increase in apoptosis within the TN compartment.
Fig. 6
shows a representative experiment
in this series.
|
Groups of old mice were treated with IL-7, SCF, IL-7 plus SCF, or
PBS to determine whether the results in vitro were echoed in vivo.
Treatment of old mice with IL-7 alone revealed a significant increase
in the total TN number (Table III
). In
comparison, treatment with SCF resulted in no change in total TN
number, and treatment with IL-7 and SCF together did increase total TN
thymocyte number, although not significantly. There was no significant
difference between IL-7 and combination treatment in total TN
number.
|
The total number of live cells was calculated by subtracting the
numbers of annexin V+ cells from the total
numbers of TN cells and from the numbers of each of the four subsets.
Compared with PBS-treated controls, IL-7 therapy significantly
increased the number of live cells in the TN population (Table III
).
Because the total TN number and total live TN number after treatment
with IL-7 plus SCF did not significantly differ from IL-7 alone, we
have displayed the numbers of live cells within the four TN
subpopulations in IL-7-treated mice to establish the prosurvival effect
of IL-7. IL-7 increased the number of live cells in the
CD44+CD25-,
CD44+CD25+, and
CD44-CD25+ subsets (Fig. 7
), although only the increases in
CD44+CD25- and
CD44-CD25+ were
significant. Treatment with SCF did not significantly increase the
total number of live cells in the TN population or in any of the four
subsets. However, the percentage of live cells within each
subpopulation, did not significantly differ between IL-7- and
PBS-treated mice. The percentage of live cells within the
CD44+CD25-,
CD44+CD25+,
CD44-CD25+, and
CD44-CD25- TN thymocytes
of IL-7-treated mice were 66 ± 4%, 73 ± 14%, 73 ±
14%, and 54 ± 37%, and for the PBS-treated mice 69 ±
11%, 70 ± 22%, 77 ± 11%, and 74 ± 21%,
respectively.
|
| Discussion |
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Here we show for the first time that there is a significant
age-associated increase in apoptosis within the TN population that can
be pinpointed to the
CD44+CD25+ and
CD44-CD25+ stages of
thymocyte development. These stages express growth factor receptors
with an essential role in thymocyte development, the most important of
which are c-kit and the IL-7R complex
(IL-7R
c). c-kit is expressed on
CD44+CD25- and
CD44+CD25+ TN populations,
and expression is lost by the
CD44-CD25+ stage
(31), whereas the IL-7R is expressed on all four TN
populations (32). Evidence for the obligatory requirement
of both SCF and IL-7 comes from mice doubly deficient in both
receptors. These
c-kit-/-
c-/-
mice show complete abrogation of T cell development, which is not
apparent in the single-deficient mutants (27). The limited
thymopoiesis present in IL-7-/-,
IL-7R
-/-,
IL-7R
c-/-
(24, 25, 26), and c-kit-/- mice
(27) has led to the conclusion that SCF and IL-7 act
synergistically at the early stages of T cell development (26, 27). This conclusion provided our approach in analyzing the
effect of both IL-7 and SCF on the in vitro survival of TN cells from
old mice and identifying the effect of IL-7 and SCF treatment on TN
survival in vivo as a potential means of reversing age-associated
thymic atrophy. Analysis of the thymi in aged mice reveals a bottleneck
in thymocyte production between the multipotent stem cell progenitor
stage (CD44+CD25- TN) and
their progeny (CD44+CD25+
TN) that have become committed to the T cell lineage. The number of
CD44+CD25- TN thymocytes
does not alter with age; however, all subsequent subsets show markedly
reduced numbers (18). This age-associated increase in
apoptosis at the CD44+CD25+
and CD44-CD25+ TN stages
provides some explanation for the decrease in population numbers after
the CD44+CD25- stage of
development.
Our results reveal differences in the comparative ability of IL-7 and
SCF to maintain TN thymocytes in vitro. IL-7 alone or in combination
with SCF promotes TN survival, reducing apoptosis in vitro.
Furthermore, our results showed that IL-7 significantly increased live
thymocytes and decreased apoptotic thymocytes at the
CD44+CD25+ and
CD44-CD25+ TN stages from
old donors after 24 h in vitro, thus reversing the age-associated
increase in apoptosis. SCF failed to demonstrate any detectable
antiapoptotic properties in cultures from young or old donors, and a
combination of SCF and IL-7 did not improve upon the effect of IL-7
alone. Finally, the ability of IL-7 and IL-7 plus SCF to maintain live
cells in culture was more clearly apparent after 5 days in vitro,
revealing the essential nature of IL-7 and not SCF as a survival
factor. Although SCF/c-kit and IL-7/IL-7R
interactions
have been reported to compensate for each other functionally (26, 27), we did not observe synergy with respect to an antiapoptotic
effect on TN cells. In the absence of IL-7, SCF does not replace IL-7
as a prosurvival factor in culture. However, we did not investigate
other aspects of synergy, such as thymocyte proliferation.
To reinforce the in vitro observation that IL-7 reduces the age-associated increase in TN apoptosis and to identify the impact on survival in vivo, we treated aged mice with IL-7, SCF, and a combination of IL-7 and SCF. IL-7 treatment proved an effective therapy, clearly shown by the significant increase in live TN cell numbers following treatment. The increase in live CD44+CD25- TN numbers may be due to enhanced survival, enhanced intrathymic proliferation, or increased production of progenitors by the bone marrow and hence increased thymic entry. The increased number of live CD44+CD25+ and CD44-CD25+ TN cells mirrored the changes observed in vitro. Recent work by Kim et al. revealed that the trophic action of IL-7 stopped at the CD44-CD25+ TN stage of fetal thymocyte development and that cell death at the CD44-CD25- TN stage was independent of IL-7 (28). Our results support this, revealing that IL-7 did not increase live CD44-CD25- TN cells in aged mice, suggesting that the trophic action of IL-7 at this stage is minimal. The observation that the percentage contribution of live cells to each of the TN subpopulations did not increase with IL-7-treated mice implies that the significant increase in live numbers in vivo is the result of a complex interaction between increased thymopoiesis and the rate of apoptosis.
Having shown that IL-7 induced thymopoiesis in aging animals, we asked
whether SCF treatment could induce the same effect. SCF has been shown
to prevent apoptosis in various cell types (33, 34), but
not in thymocytes. Here we clearly demonstrate that SCF treatment does
not increase numbers of live cells in vivo. This result mimics our
observations in vitro. The only population to show an increase after
SCF treatment in vivo was the
CD44-CD25- TN population,
probably reflecting a change in the kinetics of TN development. These
results suggest that IL-7 and not SCF is the important contributory
factor to the changes seen in the aging thymus, whose deficit may be
central to the decline in thymocyte production. TN thymocytes showed no
decline with age, either in IL-7R
expression or in ability to
respond to IL-7 in vitro, strongly suggesting that survival of TN cells
in the aging thymus is more likely linked to a reduced availability of
IL-7 rather than an inability of the cells to respond. In support of
this, recent work in our laboratory has demonstrated that expression of
intrathymic IL-7 declines in old
mice.4
IL-7 plus SCF treatment increases the total number of live TN thymocytes, although not significantly, but failed to improve upon treatment with IL-7 alone. Despite the large increases in total and live TN numbers, the lack of significance in the combination-treated group can be explained by the large SE in this group. There was no significant difference between IL-7 and combination treatment, with the exception of the CD44-CD25+ subpopulation. Here, live cells were significantly lower in the combination-treated mice and may reflect either a change in the kinetics, transit through the group, or the induction of an additional effector molecule affecting this stage of the pathway alone.
The hypothesis explaining that the bottleneck in TN development is due
to problems with TCR
rearrangement as a result of reduced
intrathymic levels of available IL-7 (18) was questioned
recently by a paper showing age-associated thymic atrophy in three
strains of mice carrying differing TCR 
transgenes
(35). Unlike the original observations (18),
this later study failed to control for the effect of the endogenous
transgene by not observing TCR 
transgenes on a RAG knockout
background. The H-Y-transgenic mouse strain mentioned by Lacorazza et
al. (35) showing age-associated thymic atrophy does not
show atrophy when present on a RAG-2 knockout background (B. Rocha,
unpublished observation). Similarly, when mice express the AND
transgene (anti-pigeon cytochrome c, class II
restricted) on a RAG-2-/- background,
age-associated thymic atrophy does not occur (B. Lucas, unpublished
observation).
In conclusion, the increase in TN apoptosis, the ability of IL-7 to
reverse this apoptosis, no decline in IL-7R
-chain expression, and
finally, the fact that intrathymic IL-7 expression declines with
age4 all lend support to the concept that thymic
atrophy is due to a deficiency of available intrathymic IL-7
(18). The implication of this work is that therapy with
IL-7 is capable of renewing thymopoiesis in old animals, suggesting the
possibility that manipulations undertaken to increase the level of
intrathymic IL-7, thereby enhancing thymopoiesis, may hold therapeutic
potential even in very aged hosts.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Deborah Andrew, Department of Immunology, Imperial College of Science and Medicine at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, 369 Fulham Road, London SW10 9NH, U.K. ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: TN, triple negative; SCF, stem cell factor; 7-AAD, 7-amino actinomycin D; RAG, recombination-activating gene;
c, common
-chain. ![]()
4 R. Aspinall and D. Andrew. An intra-thymic deficiency in interleukin-7 is linked to age-associated thymic atrophy. Submitted for publication. ![]()
Received for publication July 21, 2000. Accepted for publication October 31, 2000.
| References |
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gene rearrangement and role of TCR-
expression during CD3-CD4-CD8- thymocyte differentiation. J. Immunol. 152:4783.[Abstract]

T cell development in the thymus of normal and genetically altered mice. Curr. Opin. Immunol. 9:263.[Medline]

T cell development and early thymocyte maturation in IL-7-/- mice. J. Immunol. 157:2366.[Abstract]
-chain and the pre-T cell receptor provide independent but critically overlapping signals in early 
T cell development. J. Exp. Med. 189:563.
-chain is essential for repertoire formation. Immunity 6:265.[Medline]

inhibit IL-7-induced proliferation of CD4-CD8-CD3-CD44+CD25+ thymocytes, but do not inhibit that of CD4-CD8-CD3-CD44-CD25- thymocytes. Immunology 90:543.[Medline]
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T. S. P. Heng, G. L. Goldberg, D. H. D. Gray, J. S. Sutherland, A. P. Chidgey, and R. L. Boyd Effects of Castration on Thymocyte Development in Two Different Models of Thymic Involution J. Immunol., September 1, 2005; 175(5): 2982 - 2993. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. S. Sutherland, G. L. Goldberg, M. V. Hammett, A. P. Uldrich, S. P. Berzins, T. S. Heng, B. R. Blazar, J. L. Millar, M. A. Malin, A. P. Chidgey, et al. Activation of Thymic Regeneration in Mice and Humans following Androgen Blockade J. Immunol., August 15, 2005; 175(4): 2741 - 2753. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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I. Munitic, J. A. Williams, Y. Yang, B. Dong, P. J. Lucas, N. El Kassar, R. E. Gress, and J. D. Ashwell Dynamic regulation of IL-7 receptor expression is required for normal thymopoiesis Blood, December 15, 2004; 104(13): 4165 - 4172. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. A. Phillips, T. I. Brondstetter, C. A. English, H. E. Lee, E. L. Virts, and M. L. Thoman IL-7 Gene Therapy in Aging Restores Early Thymopoiesis without Reversing Involution J. Immunol., October 15, 2004; 173(8): 4867 - 4874. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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H. Min, E. Montecino-Rodriguez, and K. Dorshkind Reduction in the Developmental Potential of Intrathymic T Cell Progenitors with Age J. Immunol., July 1, 2004; 173(1): 245 - 250. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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R. ASPINALL, S. HENSON, J. PIDO-LOPEZ, and P. T. NGOM Interleukin-7: An Interleukin for Rejuvenating the Immune System Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci., June 1, 2004; 1019(1): 116 - 122. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. Stebbing, B. Gazzard, S. Mandalia, A. Teague, A. Waterston, V. Marvin, M. Nelson, and M. Bower Antiretroviral Treatment Regimens and Immune Parameters in the Prevention of Systemic AIDS-Related Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma J. Clin. Oncol., June 1, 2004; 22(11): 2177 - 2183. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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C. E. Muller-Sieburg, R. H. Cho, L. Karlsson, J.-F. Huang, and H. B. Sieburg Myeloid-biased hematopoietic stem cells have extensive self-renewal capacity but generate diminished lymphoid progeny with impaired IL-7 responsiveness Blood, June 1, 2004; 103(11): 4111 - 4118. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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L. Li, H.-C. Hsu, C. R. Stockard, P. Yang, J. Zhou, Q. Wu, W. E. Grizzle, and J. D. Mountz IL-12 Inhibits Thymic Involution by Enhancing IL-7- and IL-2-Induced Thymocyte Proliferation J. Immunol., March 1, 2004; 172(5): 2909 - 2916. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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N. Dainiak, J. K. Waselenko, J. O. Armitage, T. J. MacVittie, and A. M. Farese The Hematologist and Radiation Casualties Hematology, January 1, 2003; 2003(1): 473 - 496. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. L. Sinha, T. J. Fry, D. H. Fowler, G. Miller, and C. L. Mackall Interleukin 7 worsens graft-versus-host disease Blood, September 18, 2002; 100(7): 2642 - 2649. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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D. Min, P. A. Taylor, A. Panoskaltsis-Mortari, B. Chung |