4.6 Review

Evolution of thymopoietic microenvironments

Journal

OPEN BIOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsob.200383

Keywords

vertebrate; adaptive immunity; antigen receptor; thymus; Foxn1; self-tolerance

Funding

  1. Max Planck Society
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [256073931-SFB 1160]
  3. European Research Council [323126]
  4. Jung Foundation for Science and Medicine
  5. JSPS Overseas Research Fellowship
  6. European Research Council (ERC) [323126] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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In vertebrates, the thymus plays a crucial role in the development of mature lymphocytes, with the microenvironment of the thymus influencing lymphopoietic activity. The Foxn1/4 family of transcription factors control the formation of a functional thymic microenvironment. Throughout evolution, the thymus transitioned from supporting both B cell and T cell development to specializing in T cell development.
In vertebrates, the development of lymphocytes from undifferentiated haematopoietic precursors takes place in so-called primary lymphoid organs, such as the thymus. Therein, lymphocytes undergo a complex differentiation and selection process that culminates in the generation of a pool of mature T cells that collectively express a self-tolerant repertoire of somatically diversified antigen receptors. Throughout this entire process, the microenvironment of the thymus in large parts dictates the sequence and outcome of the lymphopoietic activity. In vertebrates, direct genetic evidence in some species and circumstantial evidence in others suggest that the formation of a functional thymic microenvironment is controlled by members of the Foxn1/4 family of transcription factors. In teleost fishes, both Foxn1 and Foxn4 contribute to thymopoietic activity, whereas Foxn1 is both necessary and sufficient in the mammalian thymus. The evolutionary history of Foxn1/4 genes suggests that an ancient Foxn4 gene lineage gave rise to the Foxn1 genes in early vertebrates, raising the question of the thymopoietic capacity of the ancestor common to all vertebrates. Recent attempts to reconstruct the early events in the evolution of thymopoietic tissues by replacement of the mouse Foxn1 gene by Foxn1-like genes isolated from various chordate species suggest a plausible scenario. It appears that the primordial thymus was a bi-potent lymphoid organ, supporting both B cell and T cell development; however, during the course of vertebrate, evolution B cell development was gradually diminished converting the thymus into a site specialized in T cell development.

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