Recreating the thymus
I am writing today from the European Congress for Immunology in Berlin. A talk by Thomas Boehm was the highlight of the first day for me.
The Boehm laboratory has been looking at the genetic evolution of thymus development. The thymus is the nursery for T cells, the coordinator of the adaptive immune response. The Boehm laboratory analysed the genetic phylogeny of sample species spanning the 500 million years of thymus evolution and found several key genes that have been conserved through this process. The master coordinator of thymus development, Foxn1, had already been known, but how this master coordinator worked was a mystery, so the Boehm laboratory used the evolutionary analysis to try to recapitulate thymic development in zebrafish and mice.
In zebrafish, Weyn and colleages were able to use live imaging to analyse the genes that the thymus needs to express in order to recruit progenitor cells. This was done by using genetic expression of coloured dyes, making the primordial thymus glow red and the progenitor cells glow green. They found that just two conserved genes, Ccl25a and Cxcl12a, were synergistically acting to draw in all the precursor cells.
In mice, Bajoghli and colleages tried to use the knowledge gleaned from evolutionary analysis to completely bypass Foxn1. The rationale is that if we know exactly what Foxn1 does to drive thymic development then we should be able to recapitulate thymic development in the absence of Foxn1 by simply expressing the downstream genes. So the Boehm team took the four key genes that were conserved over 500 million years of thymic development, Ccl25, Cxcl12, KitL and Dll4, and expressed them in isolation or in combination in thymic cells that were genetically deficient in Foxn1. Normally, these deficient thymic cells cannot attract T cell precursors. However, Bajoghli and colleages found that just as in zebrafish, two genes in mice were able to essentially restore the capacity to recruit precursors, Ccl25 and Cxcl12. A third gene, KitL, allowed these cells to proliferate and increase in number. What these three genes could not do, however, was turn the precursors into T cells. That job required the fourth gene, Dll4, which had no role in recruitment or proliferation but which was essential for the differentiation of recruited precursors into T cells. Through evolutionary genetics the gene network of an entire organ is being unravelled.
Some of this research is current unpublished, other aspects just came out in the journal Cell.
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