Frontiers in Immunology (Jan 2020)

Qualitative Changes in Cortical Thymic Epithelial Cells Drive Postpartum Thymic Regeneration

  • Maude Dumont-Lagacé,
  • Tariq Daouda,
  • Tariq Daouda,
  • Lucyle Depoërs,
  • Jérémie Zumer,
  • Yahya Benslimane,
  • Sylvie Brochu,
  • Lea Harrington,
  • Sébastien Lemieux,
  • Claude Perreault

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2019.03118
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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During gestation, sex hormones cause a significant thymic involution which enhances fertility. This thymic involution is rapidly corrected following parturition. As thymic epithelial cells (TECs) are responsible for the regulation of thymopoiesis, we analyzed the sequential phenotypic and transcriptomic changes in TECs during the postpartum period in order to identify mechanisms triggering postpartum thymic regeneration. In particular, we performed flow cytometry analyses and deep RNA-sequencing on purified TEC subsets at several time points before and after parturition. We report that pregnancy-induced involution is not caused by loss of TECs since their number does not change during or after pregnancy. However, during pregnancy, we observed a significant depletion of all thymocyte subsets downstream of the double-negative 1 (DN1) differentiation stage. Variations in thymocyte numbers correlated with conspicuous changes in the transcriptome of cortical TECs (cTECs). The transcriptomic changes affected predominantly cTEC expression of Foxn1, its targets and several genes that are essential for thymopoiesis. By contrast, medullary TECs (mTECs) showed very little transcriptomic changes in the early postpartum regenerative phase, but seemed to respond to the expansion of single-positive (SP) thymocytes in the late phase of regeneration. Together, these results show that postpartum thymic regeneration is orchestrated by variations in expression of a well-defined subset of cTEC genes, that occur very early after parturition.

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