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Prevention and reversal of thymus involution mediated by the transcription factor Foxn1

Central to the age-associated decrease in immune system function, characterised by the increase in the frequency and severity of infections and autoimmune diseases, is the decrease in production of naïve T cells by the thymus. This results from the targeted degeneration or involution of the thymus with age. One of the principal causes of involution is the loss of organisation and functionality of the thymic epithelium, which confers the primary function of the organ via interactive regulation of T cell development. Although the mechanisms that govern the deterioration of the thymic epithelium are poorly understood, a number of recent reports indicate that the transcription factor, Foxn1, is required to maintain this compartment in the postnatal thymus. Thus, the first aim of this study was to precisely profile Foxn1 expression levels in aging postnatal thymic epithelial cells. The second aim was to investigate the effects of upregulating Foxn1 in the aging thymus, which was achieved using a novel, regulatable Foxn1 mouse model generated during this study. In this study I show that Foxn1 is expressed at different levels in different postnatal thymic epithelial cell (TEC) sub-populations suggesting a dosage-dependent mode of action for Foxn1. Additionally, using two experimental approaches, I show that Foxn1 expression decreases with age in TECs, supporting the current data that implicate the loss of Foxn1 as a potential cause of thymus involution. Next, I generated a tissue-specific, regulatable Foxn1 mouse model that allowed me to modulate Foxn1 expression in the postnatal thymus. Firstly, using this model, I show that thymus involution can be prevented by the up-regulation and maintenance of Foxn1 expression from the onset of involution. Thymi that up-regulated Foxn1 were overtly larger and exhibited greater cellularity in both the thymocyte and epithelial compartments compared to age matched controls. Additionally, the larger TEC compartment contained a higher proportion of functional and proliferating TECs that upregulated a panel of genes involved in TEC development and function. Next, I show that Foxn1 up-regulation in aged, involuted thymi is sufficient to partially reverse involution, as shown by an increase in TEC organisation and intrathymic T cell numbers. While other strategies that promote thymic rebound or reversal have been reported, including cytokine treatment or sex steroid ablation, these approaches are complicated by side effects and toxicity. Hence, I propose a novel model for immune reconstitution through the regulation of Foxn1 expression in the postnatal thymus.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:578336
Date January 2011
CreatorsBredenkamp, Nicholas
ContributorsBlackburn, Clare; Smith, Andrew
PublisherUniversity of Edinburgh
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://hdl.handle.net/1842/7819

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