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Young, proliferative thymic epithelial cells engraft and function in aging thymuses.
J Immunol. 2015 May 15;194(10):4784-95. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.1403158
Kim MJ, Miller CM, Shadrach JL, Wagers AJ, Serwold T
Abstract:
.....Using heterochronic parabiosis, we observe that young circulating factors are not sufficient to drive regeneration of the aged thymus. In contrast, we find that resupplying young, engraftable thymic epithelial cells (TECs) to a middle-aged or defective thymus leads to thymic growth and increased T cell production. Intrathymic transplantation and in vitro colony-forming assays reveal that the engraftment and proliferative capacities of TECs diminish early in life, whereas the receptivity of the thymus to TEC engraftment remains relatively constant with age. These results support a model in which thymic growth and subsequent involution are driven by cell-intrinsic changes in the proliferative capacity of TECs, and further show that young TECs can engraft and directly drive the growth of involuted thymuses.
PMID: 25870244
Tags: immune senescence, parabiosis, thymus