A multistep adhesion cascade for lymphoid progenitor cell homing to the thymus

Citation:

Scimone LM, Aifantis I, Apostolou I, von Boehmer H, von Andrian UH. A multistep adhesion cascade for lymphoid progenitor cell homing to the thymus. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2006;103 (18) :7006-11.
pnas.0602024103.pdf1.16 MB

Date Published:

2006 May 02

Abstract:

Homing of bone marrow (BM)-derived progenitors to the thymus is essential for T cell development. We have previously reported that two subpopulations of common lymphoid progenitors, CLP-1 and CLP-2, coexist in the BM and give rise to lymphocytes. We demonstrate that CLP-2 migrate to the thymus more efficiently than any other BM-derived progenitors. Short-term adoptive transfer experiments revealed that CLP-2 homing involves P-selectin/P-selectin glycoprotein ligand 1 interactions, pertussis toxin-sensitive chemoattractant signaling by CC chemokine ligand 25 through CC chemokine receptor 9, and binding of the integrins alpha4beta1 and alphaLbeta2 to their respective ligands, vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 and intercellular adhesion molecule 1. Preferential thymus-tropism of CLP-2 correlated with higher chemokine receptor 9 expression than on other BM progenitors. Thus, CLP access to the thymus is controlled by a tissue-specific and subset-selective multistep adhesion cascade.

Last updated on 04/06/2023