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Publication : The developmental program of human dendritic cells is operated independently of conventional myeloid and lymphoid pathways.

First Author  Ishikawa F Year  2007
Journal  Blood Volume  110
Issue  10 Pages  3591-660
PubMed ID  17664352 Mgi Jnum  J:150332
Mgi Id  MGI:3850400 Doi  10.1182/blood-2007-02-071613
Citation  Ishikawa F, et al. (2007) The developmental program of human dendritic cells is operated independently of conventional myeloid and lymphoid pathways. Blood 110(10):3591-660
abstractText  Two distinct dendritic cell (DC) subsets, conventional DCs (cDCs) and plasmacytoid DCs (pDCs), have been shown to develop via either the myeloid or the lymphoid pathway in murine hematopoiesis. Lineage-specific phenotypes or functions of 'myeloid' and 'lymphoid' DCs, however, still remain elusive. Furthermore, such analysis has been particularly difficult in humans, due to lack of an assay system appropriate for the analysis of human stem and progenitor cell differentiation. Here, using a highly efficient xenotransplantation model, we extensively analyze the origin and the molecular signature of human DCs. Purified human common myeloid progenitors (CMPs) and common lymphoid progenitors (CLPs) were intravenously transplanted into nonobese diabetic-severe combined immunodeficiency (NOD-scid)/IL2rgamma(null) newborn mice. CMPs and CLPs displayed significant expansion in the xenogeneic host, and human cDC and pDC progeny were isolatable. Strikingly, each human DC subset possessed indistinguishable expression patterns of surface phenotype and gene transcripts regardless of their CMP or CLP origin, even at the genome-wide level. Thus, cDC and pDC normally develop after cells have committed to the myeloid or the lymphoid lineage in human hematopoiesis, while their transcriptional signatures are well preserved irrespective of their lineage origin. We propose that human DCs use unique and flexible developmental programs that cannot be categorized into the conventional myeloid or lymphoid pathway.
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