Abstract
BackgroundHematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) derived from birth through adult possess differing differentiation potential for T or B cell fate in the thymus; neonatal bone marrow (BM) cells also have a higher potential for B cell production in BM compared to adult HSCs. We hypothesized that this hematopoietic-intrinsic B potential might also regulate B cell development in the thymus during ontogeny.MethodsFoxn1lacZ mutant mice are a model in which down regulation of a thymic epithelial cell (TEC) specific transcription factor beginning one week postnatal causes a dramatic reduction of thymocytes production. In this study, we found that while T cells were decreased, the frequency of thymic B cells was greatly increased in these mutants in the perinatal period. We used this model to characterize the mechanisms in the thymus controlling B cell development.ResultsFoxn1lacZ mutants, T cell committed intrathymic progenitors (DN1a,b) were progressively reduced beginning one week after birth, while thymic B cells peaked at 3–4 weeks with pre-B-II progenitor phenotype, and originated in the thymus. Heterochronic chimeras showed that the capacity for thymic B cell production was due to a combination of higher B potential of neonatal HSCs, combined with a thymic microenvironment deficiency including reduction of DL4 and increase of IL-7 that promoted B cell fate.ConclusionOur findings indicate that the capacity and time course for thymic B-cell production are primarily controlled by the hematopoietic-intrinsic potential for B cells themselves during ontogeny, but that signals from TECs microenvironment also influence the frequency and differentiation potential of B cell development in the thymus.
Highlights
The thymus is the primary site of T cell development, differentiation, and maturation, and is seeded periodically by lymphoid progenitor cells (LPCs) from outside the thymus [1,2,3,4]
Heterochronic chimeras showed that the capacity for thymic B cell production was due to a combination of higher B potential of neonatal Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), combined with a thymic microenvironment deficiency including reduction of Delta-like 4 (DL4) and increase of IL-7 that promoted B cell fate
Thymic B cell development is controlled by both HSCs and thymic epithelial cell (TEC)
Summary
The thymus is the primary site of T cell development, differentiation, and maturation, and is seeded periodically by lymphoid progenitor cells (LPCs) from outside the thymus [1,2,3,4]. Adult HSCs differ from fetal HSCs in number and phenotype, and thymus-seeding LPCs derived from adult HSCs possess multiple lineage potentials for the development of T/B/ NK/DC and myeloid cells within the thymus [13,14,15,16]. Thymic seeding progenitors (TSPs) in the neonatal thymus appear to have higher B potential than those from adult thymus [21,22]. How does TSPs in variable potential undergo the B lineage commitment and expansion, and be regulated by the thymic environment during neonatal to young adult is still unclear. We hypothesized that this hematopoietic-intrinsic B potential might regulate B cell development in the thymus during ontogeny
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