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Both retention and recirculation contribute to long-lived regulatory T-cell accumulation in the thymus.

Authors :
Yang, EnJun
Zou, Tao
Leichner, Theresa M.
Zhang, Shirley L.
Kambayashi, Taku
Source :
European Journal of Immunology; Sep2014, Vol. 44 Issue 9, p2712-2720, 9p
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Natural Treg cells acquire their lineage-determining transcription factor Foxp3 during development in the thymus and are important in maintaining immunologic tolerance. Here, we analyzed the composition of the thymic Treg-cell pool using RAG2- GFP/ Fox P3- RFP dual reporter mice and found that a population of long-lived GFP<superscript>−</superscript> Treg cells exists in the thymus. These long-lived Treg cells substantially increased with age, to a point where they represent >90% of the total thymic Treg-cell pool at 6 months of age. In contrast, long-lived conventional T cells remained at ∼15% of the total thymic pool at 6 months of age. Consistent with these studies, we noticed that host-derived Treg cells represented a large fraction (∼10%) of the total thymic Treg-cell pool in bone marrow chimeras, suggesting that long-lived Treg cells also reside in the thymus of these mice. The pool of long-lived Treg cells in the thymus was sustained by retention of Treg cells in the thymus and by recirculation of peripheral Treg cells back into the thymus. These long-lived thymic Treg cells suppressed T-cell proliferation to an equivalent extent to splenic Treg cells. Together, these data demonstrate that long-lived Treg cells accumulate in the thymus by both retention and recirculation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00142980
Volume :
44
Issue :
9
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
European Journal of Immunology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
98198229
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.201444529