eLife (Sep 2018)

Differential requirement of kindlin-3 for T cell progenitor homing to the non-vascularized and vascularized thymus

  • Federico Andrea Moretti,
  • Sarah Klapproth,
  • Raphael Ruppert,
  • Andreas Margraf,
  • Jasmin Weber,
  • Robert Pick,
  • Christoph Scheiermann,
  • Markus Sperandio,
  • Reinhard Fässler,
  • Markus Moser

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.35816
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

Read online

The role of integrin-mediated adhesion during T cell progenitor homing to and differentiation within the thymus is ill-defined, mainly due to functional overlap. To circumvent compensation, we disrupted the hematopoietic integrin regulator kindlin-3 in mice and found a progressive thymus atrophy that is primarily caused by an impaired homing capacity of T cell progenitors to the vascularized thymus. Notably, the low shear flow conditions in the vascular system at midgestation allow kindlin-3-deficient fetal liver-derived T cell progenitors to extravasate via pharyngeal vessels and colonize the avascular thymus primordium. Once in the thymus, kindlin-3 promotes intrathymic T cell proliferation by facilitating the integrin-dependent crosstalk with thymic antigen presenting cells, while intrathymic T cell migration, maturation into single positive CD4 and CD8 T cells and release into the circulation proceed without kindlin-3. Thus, kindlin-3 is dispensable for integrin-mediated T cell progenitor adhesion and signalling at low and indispensable at high shear forces.

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