Literature DB >> 23894200

Differential postselection proliferation dynamics of αβ T cells, Foxp3+ regulatory T cells, and invariant NKT cells monitored by genetic pulse labeling.

Lisa Föhse1, Annika Reinhardt, Linda Oberdörfer, Susanne Schmitz, Reinhold Förster, Bernard Malissen, Immo Prinz.   

Abstract

The thymus generates two divergent types of lymphocytes, innate and adaptive T cells. Innate T cells such as invariant NKT cells provide immediate immune defense, whereas adaptive T cells require a phase of expansion and functional differentiation outside the thymus. Naive adaptive T lymphocytes should not proliferate much after positive selection in the thymus to ensure a highly diverse TCR repertoire. In contrast, oligoclonal innate lymphocyte populations are efficiently expanded through intrathymic proliferation. For CD4(+)Foxp3(+) regulatory T cells (Tregs), which are thought to be generated by agonist recognition, it is not clear whether they proliferate upon thymic selection. In this study, we investigated thymic and peripheral T cell proliferation by genetic pulse labeling. To this end, we used a mouse model in which all developing αβ thymocytes were marked by expression of a histone 2B-enhanced GFP (H2BeGFP) fusion-protein located within the Tcrd locus (TcrdH2BeGFP). This reporter gene was excised during TCR α-chain VJ-recombination, and the retained H2BeGFP signal was thus diluted upon cell proliferation. We found that innate T cells such as CD1d-restricted invariant NKT cells all underwent a phase of intense intrathymic proliferation, whereas adaptive CD4(+) and CD8(+) single-positive thymocytes including thymic Tregs cycled, on average, only once after final selection. After thymic exit, retention or loss of very stable H2BeGFP signal indicated the proliferative history of peripheral αβ T cells. There, peripheral Tregs showed lower levels of H2BeGFP compared with CD4(+)Foxp3(-) T cells. This further supports the hypothesis that the Treg repertoire is shaped by self-Ag recognition in the steady-state.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23894200     DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1301359

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Immunol        ISSN: 0022-1767            Impact factor:   5.422


  12 in total

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6.  Talin Plays a Critical Role in the Maintenance of the Regulatory T Cell Pool.

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7.  NKAP Regulates Invariant NKT Cell Proliferation and Differentiation into ROR-γt-Expressing NKT17 Cells.

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9.  Multicongenic fate mapping quantification of dynamics of thymus colonization.

Authors:  Natalia Ziętara; Marcin Łyszkiewicz; Jacek Puchałka; Katrin Witzlau; Annika Reinhardt; Reinhold Förster; Oliver Pabst; Immo Prinz; Andreas Krueger
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  2015-09-07       Impact factor: 14.307

10.  Genetic models reveal origin, persistence and non-redundant functions of IL-17-producing γδ T cells.

Authors:  Inga Sandrock; Annika Reinhardt; Sarina Ravens; Christoph Binz; Anneke Wilharm; Joana Martins; Linda Oberdörfer; Likai Tan; Stefan Lienenklaus; Baojun Zhang; Ronald Naumann; Yuan Zhuang; Andreas Krueger; Reinhold Förster; Immo Prinz
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  2018-11-19       Impact factor: 14.307

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