1. Two waves of distinct hematopoietic progenitor cells colonize the fetal thymus.
- Author
-
Ramond, Cyrille, Berthault, Claire, Burlen-Defranoux, Odile, de Sousa, Ana Pereira, Guy-Grand, Delphine, Vieira, Paulo, Pereira, Pablo, and Cumano, Ana
- Subjects
- *
HEMATOPOIETIC stem cells , *PROGENITOR cells , *CELL differentiation , *B cells , *LYMPHOCYTES , *T cells , *IMMUNOLOGY - Abstract
The generation of T cells depends on the migration of hematopoietic progenitor cells to the thymus throughout life. The identity of the thymus-settling progenitor cells has been a matter of considerable debate. Here we found that thymopoiesis was initiated by a first wave of T cell lineage-restricted progenitor cells with limited capacity for population expansion but accelerated differentiation into mature T cells. They gave rise to αβ and γδ T cells that constituted Vγ3+ dendritic epithelial T cells. Thymopoiesis was subsequently maintained by less-differentiated progenitor cells that retained the potential to develop into B cells and myeloid cells. In that second wave, which started before birth, progenitor cells had high proliferative capacity but delayed differentiation capacity and no longer gave rise to embryonic γδ T cells. Our work reconciles conflicting hypotheses on the nature of thymus-settling progenitor cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF