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Lineage commitment and differentiation of T and natural killer lymphocytes in the fetal mouse
Author(s) -
Carlyle James R.,
ZúñigaPflücker Juan Curios
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
immunological reviews
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.839
H-Index - 223
eISSN - 1600-065X
pISSN - 0105-2896
DOI - 10.1111/j.1600-065x.1998.tb01230.x
Subject(s) - biology , immunology , lineage (genetic) , lymphopoiesis , fetus , progenitor cell , lineage markers , microbiology and biotechnology , stem cell , genetics , pregnancy , gene
Summary: T cells and natural killer (NK) cells are presumed to share a common intrathymic precursor. The development of conventional a|3 T lymphocytes begins within the early fetal thymus, after the colonization of multipotent CDl1 71 precursors. Irrevocable commitment to the T lineage is marked by thymus‐induced expression of CD25. However, the contribution of the fetal thymus to NK lineage commitment and differentiation remains largely unappreciated. Recently, we demonstrated that the development of functional mouse NK cells occurs first in the fetal thymus. Moreover, the appearance of mature fetal thymic NK cells (NK1.1 + /CD 117 ‐ ) is preceded by a thymus‐induced developmental stage (NKl.1 + /CD1 17 + ) that marks lineage commitment of multipotent hematopoietic precursors to the T and NK‐cell fates. Commitment to the T/NK bipotent stage is induced by fetal thymic stroma, but is not thymus dependent. Recent data indicate that CD90 + /CD117 lo fetal blood prothymocytes exhibit NK lineage potential and are phenotypically and functionally identical to fetal thymic NK1,1 + /CD1 17 + progenitors. This finding also indicates that full commitment of circulating precursors to the T‐cell lineage occurs after thymus colonization. In this review, we discuss recent insights into the cellular and molecular events involved in fetal mouse T and NK lineage commitment and differentiation to unipotent progenitors.

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