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Aire Controls in Trans the Production of Medullary Thymic Epithelial Cells Expressing Ly-6C/Ly-6G
Author(s) -
Junko Morimoto,
Yumiko Nishikawa,
Takumi Kakimoto,
Kohei Furutani,
N. Kihara,
Minoru Matsumoto,
Koichi Tsuneyama,
Yuko Kozono,
Haruo Kozono,
Katsuto Hozumi,
Kazuyoshi Hosomichi,
Hitoshi Nishijima,
Mitsuru Matsumoto
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.1800950
Subject(s) - transcriptome , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , central tolerance , population , t cell , gene , gene expression , immunology , genetics , medicine , immune system , environmental health
Medullary thymic epithelial cells (mTECs), which express a wide range of tissue-restricted Ags (TRAs), contribute to the establishment of self-tolerance by eliminating autoreactive T cells and/or inducing regulatory T cells. Aire controls a diverse set of TRAs within Aire-expressing cells by employing various transcriptional pathways. As Aire has a profound effect on transcriptomes of mTECs, including TRAs not only at the single-cell but also the population level, we suspected that Aire (Aire + mTECs) might control the cellular composition of the thymic microenvironment. In this study, we confirmed that this is indeed the case by identifying a novel mTEC subset expressing Ly-6 family protein whose production was defective in Aire-deficient thymi. Reaggregated thymic organ culture experiments demonstrated that Aire did not induce the expression of Ly-6C/Ly-6G molecules from mTECs as Aire-dependent TRAs in a cell-intrinsic manner. Instead, Aire + mTECs functioned in rans o maintain Ly-6C/Ly-6G + mTECs. Thus, Aire not only controls TRA expression transcriptionally within the cell but also controls the overall composition of mTECs in a cell-extrinsic manner, thereby regulating the transcriptome from mTECs on a global scale.

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