Literature DB >> 11181545

Androgen receptors in thymic epithelium modulate thymus size and thymocyte development.

N J Olsen1, G Olson, S M Viselli, X Gu, W J Kovacs.   

Abstract

Castration of normal male rodents results in significant enlargement of the thymus, and androgen replacement reverses these changes. Androgen-resistant testicular feminization (Tfm) mice also show significant thymus enlargement, which suggests that these changes are mediated by the androgen receptor (AR). The cellular targets of androgen action in the thymus are not known, but may include the lymphoid cells (thymocytes) as well as nonlymphoid epithelial cells, both of which have been believed to express AR. In the present study immunohistochemical analysis and hormone binding assays were used to demonstrate the presence of AR in thymic epithelial cells. The physiological significance of this epithelial cell AR expression was defined by further studies performed in vivo using chimeric mice, produced by bone marrow transplantation, in which AR expression was limited to either lymphoid or epithelial components of the thymus. Chimeric C57 mice engrafted with Tfm bone marrow cells (AR(+) epithelium and AR(-) thymocytes) had thymuses of normal size and showed the normal involutional response to androgens, whereas chimeric Tfm mice engrafted with C57 bone marrow cells (AR(-) epithelium and AR(+) thymocytes) showed thymus enlargement and androgen insensitivity. Furthermore, phenotypic analyses of lymphocytes in mice with AR(-) thymic epithelium showed abrogation of the normal responses to androgens. These data suggest that AR expressed by thymic epithelium are important modulators of thymocyte development.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11181545     DOI: 10.1210/endo.142.3.8032

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Endocrinology        ISSN: 0013-7227            Impact factor:   4.736


  86 in total

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3.  Thymus Size and Age-related Thymic Involution: Early Programming, Sexual Dimorphism, Progenitors and Stroma.

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Review 4.  Effects of androgens on T and B lymphocyte development.

Authors:  N J Olsen; W J Kovacs
Journal:  Immunol Res       Date:  2001       Impact factor: 2.829

Review 5.  Hormonal control of T-cell development in health and disease.

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Review 9.  Strategies for reconstituting and boosting T cell-based immunity following haematopoietic stem cell transplantation: pre-clinical and clinical approaches.

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10.  CCL25 increases thymopoiesis after androgen withdrawal.

Authors:  Kirsten M Williams; Philip J Lucas; Catherine V Bare; Jiun Wang; Yu-Waye Chu; Ezekiel Tayler; Veena Kapoor; Ronald E Gress
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