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Publication : Dynamic changes in epithelial cell morphology control thymic organ size during atrophy and regeneration.

First Author  Venables T Year  2019
Journal  Nat Commun Volume  10
Issue  1 Pages  4402
PubMed ID  31562306 Mgi Jnum  J:279368
Mgi Id  MGI:6362304 Doi  10.1038/s41467-019-11879-2
Citation  Venables T, et al. (2019) Dynamic changes in epithelial cell morphology control thymic organ size during atrophy and regeneration. Nat Commun 10(1):4402
abstractText  T lymphocytes must be produced throughout life, yet the thymus, where T lymphocytes are made, exhibits accelerated atrophy with age. Even in advanced atrophy, however, the thymus remains plastic, and can be regenerated by appropriate stimuli. Logically, thymic atrophy is thought to reflect senescent cell death, while regeneration requires proliferation of stem or progenitor cells, although evidence is scarce. Here we use conditional reporters to show that accelerated thymic atrophy reflects contraction of complex cell projections unique to cortical epithelial cells, while regeneration requires their regrowth. Both atrophy and regeneration are independent of changes in epithelial cell number, suggesting that the size of the thymus is regulated primarily by rate-limiting morphological changes in cortical stroma, rather than by their cell death or proliferation. Our data also suggest that cortical epithelial morphology is under the control of medullary stromal signals, revealing a previously unrecognized endocrine-paracrine signaling axis in the thymus.
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