Cellular and Molecular Signals in T Cell Differentiation
- 30 May 2008
- book chapter
- Published by Wiley
- Vol. 84, 215-245
- https://doi.org/10.1002/9780470720660.ch12
Abstract
The thymic epithelium exerts its differentiative effects through several mechanisms, involving direct contact with stem cells as well as secretion of various thymic hormones. Indirect and direct evidence suggests that the thymus produces chemotactic factors for the stem cells that colonize the thymus anlage. The epithelium also produces several maturational factors which act upon stem cells that have undergone primary differentiation by contact with thymic epithelium. The chemical characteristics of these hormones and their mode of action at the cellular level (high affinity receptors, metabolic effects, target cells) are partly known. Their relationship with T cell factors such as Interleukin-2--produced in the periphery and endowed with strong differentiative capacity--is intriguing, the more so because thymic hormones not only act within the thymus but also affect peripheral T cells after they have emigrated from the thymus.Keywords
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