High levels of IL-7 cause dysregulation of thymocyte development
Author(s) -
Nahed El-Kassar,
Frank Flomerfelt,
Baishakhi Choudhury,
L. A. Hugar,
Kathleen Chua,
Varun Kapoor,
Philip J. Lucas,
Ronald E. Gress
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
international immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.86
H-Index - 134
eISSN - 1460-2377
pISSN - 0953-8178
DOI - 10.1093/intimm/dxs067
Subject(s) - thymocyte , lymphopoiesis , microbiology and biotechnology , notch signaling pathway , signal transduction , t cell , biology , stromal cell , phosphorylation , pi3k/akt/mtor pathway , protein kinase b , progenitor cell , immunology , cancer research , stem cell , immune system
IL-7 signaling is required for thymocyte development and its loss has a severe deleterious effect on thymus function. Thymocyte-stromal cell interactions and other mechanisms tightly regulate IL-7 expression. We show that disruption of that regulation by over-expression of IL-7 inhibits T-cell development and promotes extensive B-cell lymphopoiesis in the thymus. Our data reveal that high levels of IL-7 negate Notch-1 function in thymocytes found in IL-7 transgenic mice and in co-culture with OP9-DL1 cells. While high levels of IL-7R are present on thymocytes, increased suppressor of cytokine signaling-1 expression blunts IL-7 downstream signaling, resulting in hypo-phosphorylation of proteins in the PI3K-Akt pathway. Consequently, GSK3β remains active and inhibits Notch-1 signaling as observed by decreased Hes-1 and Deltex expression in thymic progenitors. This is the first demonstration that high levels of IL-7 antagonize Notch-1 signaling and suggest that IL-7 may affect T- versus B-lineage choice in the thymus.
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