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Publication : Clonal deletion of thymocytes can occur in the cortex with no involvement of the medulla.

First Author  McCaughtry TM Year  2008
Journal  J Exp Med Volume  205
Issue  11 Pages  2575-84
PubMed ID  18936237 Mgi Jnum  J:140650
Mgi Id  MGI:3814265 Doi  10.1084/jem.20080866
Citation  McCaughtry TM, et al. (2008) Clonal deletion of thymocytes can occur in the cortex with no involvement of the medulla. J Exp Med 205(11):2575-84
abstractText  The thymic medulla is generally held to be a specialized environment for negative selection. However, many self-reactive thymocytes first encounter ubiquitous self-antigens in the cortex. Cortical epithelial cells are vital for positive selection, but whether such cells can also promote negative selection is controversial. We used the HY(cd4) model, where T cell receptor for antigen (TCR) expression is appropriately timed and a ubiquitous self-antigen drives clonal deletion in male mice. We demonstrated unambiguously that this deletion event occurs in the thymic cortex. However, the kinetics in vivo indicated that apoptosis was activated asynchronously relative to TCR activation. We found that radioresistant antigen-presenting cells and, specifically, cortical epithelial cells do not efficiently induce apoptosis, although they do cause TCR activation. Rather, thymocytes undergoing clonal deletion were preferentially associated with rare CD11c(+) cortical dendritic cells, and elimination of such cells impaired deletion.
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