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Notch Protein Signaling Directs Early T-Cell Development
A Better Grasp of Immune Cell Lineages May Improve Outcomes for Transplant,
Other Immunosuppressed Patients
(Philadelphia, PA) - Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania
School of Medicine have recently clarified the role of the Notch
protein in T-cell development. T cells are required for many aspects of
immunity, including fighting viral infections, providing cancer surveillance,
and regulating multiple aspects of the immune response.
T cells are made in the thymus, a small organ situated under the breastbone
near the heart, whose primary function is T-cell production. However,
T cells ultimately come from hematopoietic (blood-producing) stem cells
in the bone marrow, from which all blood-cell types begin. A progenitor
cell leaves the bone marrow to seed the thymus, eventually giving rise
to T cells. In the absence of instructions by the Notch protein, T-cell
development does not occur, even in the presence of a normal thymus.
In this study — published in the most recent issue of Nature
Immunology — the investigators found that Notch, a protein
that regulates diverse cell-fate decisions in multi-cellular organisms,
is active in very early T-cell progenitors in the thymus of mice. Notch
contributes to the subsequent differentiation of these early T-cell progenitors
into T cells.
“Notch signaling instructs multi-potent progenitor cell types to
enter the T-cell developmental pathway,” says senior author Avinash
Bhandoola, MD, PhD, Assistant Professor of Pathology and Laboratory
Medicine. “However, we don’t yet understand in which tissue
these instructions are being delivered, and which cell type is the recipient.”
Co-author Warren Pear, MD, PhD, Associate Professor of
Pathology and Lab Medicine and member of Penn’s Abramson
Family Cancer Research Institute and Institute for Medicine
and Engineering, was one of the original discoverers of the role
of Notch in T-cell development. His lab developed tools to block Notch
signaling, which were key to identifying its function in T-cell progenitors.
Findings from this current study suggest that Notch acts very early after
progenitor cells enter the thymus, among other probable points in T-cell
development.
Notch activates gene transcription in the nucleus of cells, and depending
on the biochemical context, it turns certain pathways on, and others off.
“To the extent that we know where, and in which cells Notch is acting,
we may be able to figure out how Notch works in the thymus,” says
co-lead author Arivazhagan Sambandam, PhD, Research Associate,
also in the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine.
“Studying events in the thymus is important because intrathymic
events may be a bottleneck in T-cell reconstitution, which is deficient
in post-transplant patients,” says co-lead author Ivan Maillard,
MD, PhD, Research Associate in the Division of Hematology-Oncology
and the Abramson Family Cancer Research Institute. “What the study
allows us to do is begin to define exactly where intrathymic Notch signaling
happens and where to look for problems and for the relevant molecular
interactions.”
In many clinical situations, early T-cell progenitors are likely to be
deficient-especially in patients undergoing bone marrow or hematopoietic
stem cell transplantation, in whom new T cells fail to be produced for
long periods of time. In some, especially elderly patients, there is never
true recovery of T cells, and such non-recovery is associated with problems
such as infections. To improve the outcome of transplant patients, the
process of T-cell development needs to be better understood. This may
also be important in cancer patients who get profound immunosuppression
from treatments and in AIDS patients when T cells are not made at a sufficient
rate to replenish the T-cell pool.
The Pear and Bhandoola labs plan to apply the knowledge gained in their
basic scientific studies to the clinic. According to Maillard, “In
humans, it’s more difficult to look inside the thymus, but we plan
to use our unique Notch reagents in model systems to generate hypotheses
about the exact nature of Notch control of T-cell development, eventually
moving that knowledge to relevant clinical situations.”
Other Penn co-authors are Valerie P. Zediak, and Lanwei Xu. Co-authors
at other institutions are Rachel M. Gerstein from the University of Massachusetts
Medical School and Jon C. Aster, from Brigham and Women’s Hospital,
Boston. Funding for the study was provided by the National Institutes
of Health, the Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation, the Leukemia and
Lymphoma Society, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and the Swiss Society
for Grants in Medicine and Biology.
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