Long-term in vivo reconstitution of T-cell development by Pax5-deficient B-cell progenitors
- PMID: 10524629
- DOI: 10.1038/44164
Long-term in vivo reconstitution of T-cell development by Pax5-deficient B-cell progenitors
Abstract
The mechanisms controlling the commitment of haematopoietic progenitors to the B-lymphoid lineage are poorly understood. The observations that mice deficient in E2A and EBF lack B-lineage cells have implicated these two transcription factors in the commitment process. Moreover, the expression of genes encoding components of the rearrangement machinery (RAG1, RAG2, TdT) or pre-B-cell receptor (lambda5, VpreB, Igalpha, Igbeta) has been considered to indicate B-lineage commitment. All these genes including E2A and EBF are expressed in pro-B cells lacking the transcription factor Pax5. Here we show that cloned Pax5-deficient pro-B cells transferred into RAG2-deficient mice provide long-term reconstitution of the thymus and give rise to mature T cells expressing alpha/beta-T-cell receptors. The bone marrow of these mice contains a population of cells of Pax5-/- origin with the same phenotype as the donor pro-B cells. When transferred into secondary recipients, these pro-B cells again home to the bone marrow and reconstitute the thymus. Hence, B-lineage commitment is determined neither by immunoglobulin DJ rearrangement nor by the expression of E2A, EBF, lambda5, VpreB, Igalpha and Igbeta. Instead, our data implicate Pax5 in the control of B-lineage commitment.
Comment in
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Immunology. Wavering on commitment.Nature. 1999 Oct 7;401(6753):538-9. doi: 10.1038/44035. Nature. 1999. PMID: 10524616 No abstract available.
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