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Publication : Early lymphoid progenitors in mouse and man are highly sensitive to glucocorticoids.

First Author  Igarashi H Year  2005
Journal  Int Immunol Volume  17
Issue  5 Pages  501-11
PubMed ID  15746243 Mgi Jnum  J:99536
Mgi Id  MGI:3582903 Doi  10.1093/intimm/dxh230
Citation  Igarashi H, et al. (2005) Early lymphoid progenitors in mouse and man are highly sensitive to glucocorticoids. Int Immunol 17(5):501-11
abstractText  Glucocorticoids are extensively used in anti-inflammatory therapy and may contribute to the normal regulation of lymphopoiesis. This study utilized new information about the early stages of lymphopoiesis in mouse and man to determine precisely which cell types are hormone sensitive. Cycling B lineage precursors were depleted in dexamethasone-treated mice, while mature, non-dividing CD45R(Hi) CD19(Hi) lymphocytes, myeloid progenitors and stem cells with the potential for lymphocyte generation on transplantation were spared. Lineage marker-negative (Lin(-)) IL-7R(+) Flk-2(+) pro-lymphocytes also declined, but not as rapidly as the terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-positive cells within an early Lin(-) c-kit(Hi) Sca-1(Hi) fraction of bone marrow. Hormone-sensitive cells with additional properties of early lymphoid progenitors (ELP) were identified within the same Lin(-) c-kit(Hi) Sca-1(Hi) subset using human mu transgenic mice and recombination-activating gene 1 (RAG1)/green fluorescent protein knock-in animals. Furthermore, cells with a recent history of RAG1 expression were more glucocorticoid sensitive than mature lymphocytes in marrow and spleen. Lymphocyte progenitors in mice bearing a human bcl-2 transgene were protected from dexamethasone treatment. However, isolated progenitors from either wild-type or bcl-2 transgenic mice were directly sensitive to the hormone in stromal cell-free cultures, suggesting that additional factors must determine vulnerability to glucocorticoids. B lineage lymphocyte precursors were found to be abnormally elevated in the bone marrow of adrenalectomized or RU486-treated mice. This suggests that glucocorticoids may normally contribute to steady-state regulation of lymphopoiesis. Finally, parallel studies revealed that the earliest events in human lymphopoiesis are susceptible to injury during glucocorticoid therapy.
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