Stepwise development of committed progenitors in the bone marrow that generate functional T cells in the absence of the thymus

ME García-Ojeda, S Dejbakhsh-Jones… - The Journal of …, 2005 - journals.aai.org
ME García-Ojeda, S Dejbakhsh-Jones, D Chatterjea-Matthes, A Mukhopadhyay…
The Journal of Immunology, 2005journals.aai.org
We identified committed T cell progenitors (CTPs) in the mouse bone marrow that have not
rearranged the TCRβ gene; express a variety of genes associated with commitment to the T
cell lineage, including GATA-3, T cell-specific factor-1, Cβ, and Id2; and show a surface
marker pattern (CD44+ CD25− CD24+ CD5−) that is similar to the earliest T cell progenitors
in the thymus. More mature committed intermediate progenitors in the marrow have
rearranged the TCR gene loci, express Vα and Vβ genes as well as CD3ε, but do not …
Abstract
We identified committed T cell progenitors (CTPs) in the mouse bone marrow that have not rearranged the TCRβ gene; express a variety of genes associated with commitment to the T cell lineage, including GATA-3, T cell-specific factor-1, Cβ, and Id2; and show a surface marker pattern (CD44+ CD25− CD24+ CD5−) that is similar to the earliest T cell progenitors in the thymus. More mature committed intermediate progenitors in the marrow have rearranged the TCR gene loci, express Vα and Vβ genes as well as CD3ε, but do not express surface TCR or CD3 receptors. CTPs, but not progenitors from the thymus, reconstituted the αβ T cells in the lymphoid tissues of athymic nu/nu mice. These reconstituted T cells vigorously secreted IFN-γ after stimulation in vitro, and protected the mice against lethal infection with murine CMV. In conclusion, CTPs in wild-type bone marrow can generate functional T cells via an extrathymic pathway in athymic nu/nu mice.
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