Lymphohematopoietic progenitors do not have a synchronized defect with age-related thymic involution

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Abstract

It has been speculated that aging lymphohematopoietic progenitor cells (LPC) including hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) and early T-cell progenitors (ETP) have intrinsic defects that trigger age-related thymic involution. However, using a different approach, we suggest that that is not the case. We provided a young thymic microenvironment to aged mice by transplanting a fetal thymus into the kidney capsule of aged animals, and demonstrated that old mouse-derived LPCs could re-establish normal thymic lymphopoiesis and all thymocyte subpopulations, including ETPs, double negative subsets, double positive, and CD4+ and CD8+ single positive T cells. LPCs derived from aged mice could turn over young RAG-/- thymic architecture by interactions, as well as elevate percentage of peripheral CD4+ IL-2+ T cells in response to costimulator in aged mice. Conversely, intrathymic injection of ETPs sorted from young animals into old mice did not restore normal thymic lymphopoiesis, implying that a shortage and/or defect of ETPs in aged thymus do not account for age-related thymic involution. Together, our findings suggest that the underlying cause of age-related thymic involution results primarily from changes in the thymic microenvironment, causing extrinsic, rather than intrinsic, defects in T-lymphocyte progenitors. © 2007 The Authors Journal compilation © Blackwell Publishing Ltd/Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 2007.

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APA

Zhu, X., Gui, J., Dohkan, J., Cheng, L., Barnes, P. F., & Su, D. M. (2007). Lymphohematopoietic progenitors do not have a synchronized defect with age-related thymic involution. Aging Cell, 6(5), 663–672. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1474-9726.2007.00325.x

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