The thymic medulla is required for Foxp3+ regulatory but not conventional CD4+ thymocyte development

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Abstract

A key role of the thymic medulla is to negatively select autoreactive CD4+ and CD8+ thymocytes, a process important for T cell tolerance induction. However, the involvement of the thymic medulla in other aspects of αβ T cell development, including the generation of Foxp3+ natural regulatory T cells (nTreg cells) and the continued maturation of positively selected conventional αβ T cells, is unclear. We show that newly generated conventional CD69+Qa2+ CD4 single-positive thymocytes mature to the late CD69-Qa2+ stage in the absence of RelB-dependent medullary thymic epithelial cells (mTECs). Furthermore, an increasing ability to continue maturation extrathymically is observed within the CD69+CCR7-/loCCR9+ subset of conventional SP4 thymocytes, providing evidence for an independence from medullary support by the earliest stages after positive selection. In contrast, Foxp3+ nTreg cell development is medullary dependent, with mTECs fostering the generation of Foxp3-CD25+ nTreg cell precursors at the CD69+CCR7+CCR9- stage. Our results demonstrate a differential requirement for the thymic medulla in relation to CD4 conventional and Foxp3+ thymocyte lineages, in which an intact mTEC compartment is a prerequisite for Foxp3+ nTreg cell development through the generation of Foxp3-CD25+ nTreg cell precursors. © 2013 Cowan et al.

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Cowan, J. E., Parnell, S. M., Nakamura, K., Caamano, J. H., Lane, P. J. L., Jenkinson, E. J., … Anderson, G. (2013). The thymic medulla is required for Foxp3+ regulatory but not conventional CD4+ thymocyte development. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 210(4), 675–681. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20122070

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