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      Accelerated thymic atrophy as a result of elevated homeostatic expression of the genes encoded by the TNF/lymphotoxin cytokine locus.

      European Journal of Immunology
      Animals, Apoptosis, genetics, immunology, Atrophy, pathology, Bone Marrow Transplantation, Cell Count, Cell Proliferation, Epithelial Cells, Gene Dosage, Gene Expression, Humans, Keratin-8, metabolism, Lymphotoxin beta Receptor, Lymphotoxin-alpha, Lymphotoxin-beta, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Knockout, Mice, Transgenic, Receptors, Tumor Necrosis Factor, Type I, Stem Cells, T-Lymphocyte Subsets, T-Lymphocytes, Thymus Gland, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha

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          Abstract

          TNF, lymphotoxin (LT)-alpha, LT-beta and LIGHT are members of a larger superfamily of TNF-related cytokines that can cross-utilize several receptors. Although LIGHT has been implicated in thymic development and function, the role of TNF and LT remains incompletely defined. To address this, we created a model of modest homeostatic overexpression of TNF/LT cytokines using the genomic human TNF/LT locus as a low copy number Tg. Strikingly, expression of Tg TNF/LT gene products led to profound early thymic atrophy characterized by decreased numbers of thymocytes and cortical thymic epithelial cells, partial block of thymocyte proliferation at double negative (DN) 1 stage, increased apoptosis of DN2 thymocytes and severe decline of T-cell numbers in the periphery. Results of backcrossing to TNFR1-, LTbetaR- or TNF/LT-deficient backgrounds and of reciprocal bone marrow transfers implicated both LT-alpha/LT-beta to LTbetaR and TNF/LT-alpha to TNFR1 signaling in accelerated thymus degeneration. We hypothesize that chronic infections can promote thymic atrophy by upregulating LT and TNF production.

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