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Blood, 1 August 2005, Vol. 106, No. 3, pp. 886-892.
Prepublished online as a Blood First Edition Paper on April 21, 2005; DOI 10.1182/blood-2004-12-4881.
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HEMATOPOIESIS
T/B lineage choice occurs prior to intrathymic Notch signaling
Benjamin C. Harman,
William E. Jenkinson,
Sonia M. Parnell,
Simona W. Rossi,
Eric J. Jenkinson, and
Graham Anderson
From the Department of Anatomy, MRC Centre for Immune Regulation, Institute for Biomedical Research, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, United Kingdom.
Commitment of hemopoietic progenitors to the T-cell lineage is a crucial requirement for T-cell development, yet the timing and developmental cues regulating this process remain controversial. Here we have devised a technique to analyze the T-cell/B-cell lineage potential of precursors that have been recruited to the fetal mouse thymus but which have yet to contact the thymic epithelial microenvironment. We show that lymphoid progenitors arriving at the thymus are not bipotent T/B precursors, and provide evidence that intrathymic Notch signaling is not the mechanism determining T/B lineage choice in migrant precursors. Rather, we provide evidence that Notch signaling influences T/B lineage choice in lymphoid precursors through interactions with defined stromal components within the fetal liver. Collectively, our data redefine our understanding of the role and timing of Notch signaling in relation to lineage choices in lymphoid precursors.

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