'Emergency exit' of bone-marrow-resident CD34+ DNAM-1 bright CXCR4+-committed lymphoid precursors during chronic infection and inflammation

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Abstract

During chronic inflammatory disorders, a persistent natural killer (NK) cell derangement is observed. While increased cell turnover is expected, little is known about whether and how NK-cell homeostatic balance is maintained. Here, flow cytometric analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells in chronic inflammatory disorders, both infectious and non-infectious, reveals the presence of a CD34+ CD226(DNAM-1) bright CXCR4+ cell population displaying transcriptional signatures typical of common lymphocyte precursors and giving rise to NK-cell progenies with high expression of activating receptors and mature function and even to α/β T lymphocytes. CD34+ CD226bright CXCR4+ cells reside in bone marrow, hardly circulate in healthy donors and are absent in cord blood. Their proportion correlates with the degree of inflammation, reflecting lymphoid cell turnover/reconstitution during chronic inflammation. These findings provide insight on intermediate stages of NK-cell development, a view of emergency recruitment of cell precursors, and upgrade our understanding and monitoring of chronic inflammatory conditions.

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APA

Bozzano, F., Marras, F., Ascierto, M. L., Cantoni, C., Cenderello, G., Dentone, C., … De Maria, A. (2015). “Emergency exit” of bone-marrow-resident CD34+ DNAM-1 bright CXCR4+-committed lymphoid precursors during chronic infection and inflammation. Nature Communications, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms9109

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