Spatially restricted JAG1-Notch signaling in human thymus provides suitable DC developmental niches
Loading...
Official URL
Full text at PDC
Publication date
2017
Advisors (or tutors)
Editors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Rockefeller University Press
Citation
Martín-Gayo E, González-García S, García-León MJ, Murcia-Ceballos A, Alcain J, García-Peydró M, Allende L, de Andrés B, Gaspar ML, Toribio ML. Spatially restricted JAG1-Notch signaling in human thymus provides suitable DC developmental niches. J Exp Med. 2017 Nov 6;214(11):3361-3379. doi: 10.1084/jem.20161564.
Abstract
A key unsolved question regarding the developmental origin of conventional and plasmacytoid dendritic cells (cdcs and pdcs, respectively) resident in the steady-state thymus is whether early thymic progenitors (EtPs) could escape t cell fate constraints imposed normally by a notch-inductive microenvironment and undergo dc development. By modeling dc generation in bulk and clonal cultures, we show here that Jagged1 (JAG1)-mediated notch signaling allows human EtPs to undertake a myeloid transcriptional program, resulting in GAtA2-dependent generation of cd34+ cd123+ progenitors with restricted pdc, cdc, and monocyte potential, whereas delta-like1 signaling down-regulates GAtA2 and impairs myeloid development. Progressive commitment to the dc lineage also occurs intrathymically, as myeloid-primed cd123+ monocyte/dc and common dc progenitors, equivalent to those previously identified in the bone marrow, are resident in the normal human thymus. the identification of a discrete JAG1+ thymic medullary niche enriched for dc-lineage cells expressing notch receptors further validates the human thymus as a dc-poietic organ, which provides selective microenvironments permissive for dc development.