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Conversion of the thymus into a bipotent lymphoid organ by replacement of FOXN1 with its paralog, FOXN4.

Cell Rep. 2014 Aug 21;8(4):1184-97. Epub 2014 Aug 14
Jeremy B Swann 1 , Annelies Weyn 1 , Daisuke Nagakubo 1 , Conrad C Bleul 1 , Atsushi Toyoda 2 , Christiane Happe 1 , Nikolai Netuschil 1 , Isabell Hess 1 , Annette Haas-Assenbaum 1 , Yoshihito Taniguchi 3 , Michael Schorpp 1 , Thomas Boehm 4
Jeremy B Swann 1 , Annelies Weyn 1 , Daisuke Nagakubo 1 , Conrad C Bleul 1 , Atsushi Toyoda 2 , Christiane Happe 1 , Nikolai Netuschil 1 , Isabell Hess 1 , Annette Haas-Assenbaum 1 , Yoshihito Taniguchi 3 , Michael Schorpp 1 , Thomas Boehm 4
+ et al

[No authors listed]

Author information
  • 1 Department of Developmental Immunology, Max Planck Institute of Immunobiology and Epigenetics, Stuebeweg 51, 79108 Freiburg, Germany.
  • 2 Comparative Genomics Laboratory, Center for Genetic Resource Information, National Institute of Genetics, Mishima, Shizuoka 411-8540, Japan.
  • 3 Department of Radiation Genetics, Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto University, Yoshida Konoe, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606-8501, Japan.
  • 4 Department of Developmental Immunology, Max Planck Institute of Immunobiology and Epigenetics, Stuebeweg 51, 79108 Freiburg, Germany. Electronic address: boehm@immunbio.mpg.de.

摘要


The thymus is a lymphoid organ unique to vertebrates, and it provides a unique microenvironment that facilitates the differentiation of immature hematopoietic precursors into mature T cells. We subjected the evolutionary trajectory of the thymic microenvironment to experimental analysis. A hypothetical primordial form of the thymus was established in mice by replacing FOXN1, the vertebrate-specific master regulator of thymic epithelial cell function, with its metazoan ancestor, FOXN4, thereby resetting the regulatory and coding changes that have occurred since the divergence of these two paralogs. FOXN4 exhibited substantial thymopoietic activity. Unexpectedly, histological changes and a functional imbalance between the lymphopoietic cytokine IL7 and the T cell specification factor DLL4 within the reconstructed thymus resulted in coincident but spatially segregated T and B cell development. Our results identify an evolutionary mechanism underlying the conversion of a general lymphopoietic organ to a site of exclusive T cell generation.