|
Thymus Development
Evolutionary onset of thymus development coincides with that of the jaw.
It has been speculated that with the appearance of the jaw dietary changes
as well as increased injuries and infections occurred, creating selective
pressure for the development of an organ of high output of immune cells
with a diverse and anticipatory repertoire. Thus the cartilaginous (chondrichthyes)
and bony fishes (osteichthyes) are the first vertebrates in which a thymus
can be identified.
The thymus is the centerpiece of the adaptive immune system because it
provides the environment for generation and selection of large numbers
of antigen-specific T cells.
The thymus is also the organ where autoimmunity is controlled either by
deleting or anergizing autoreactive T cells (“central tolerance”).
Similarly to humans, zebrafish thymus development depends on contribution
from all three germlayers (see Fig.1). The hindbrain rhombomeres (Fig.1,
left panel) from which neural crest cells arise are stained with Krox-20
(third and fifth rhombomere, r3 and r5). Neural crest cell (NCC) expression
of forkhead 6 (Fkd6) in 15-somite (a developmental stage, approximately
20 hpf, at which 15 body segments can be counted) wild-type embryo is
shown in the middle panel. Arrow indicates the third, postotic (behind
the ear vesicle) stream of neural crest that invades the third and fourth
pharyngeal pouches. In d2 wild-type embryos Hoxa-3 is expressed in rhombomeres
5 and 6 (arrow) and pharyngeal endoderm (arrowhead). Expression of Nkx2.3
is seen in pharyngeal pouches (middle top panel, arrow) and in anterior
gut (asterisk) in d2 wild-type larva. Mesodermally derived hematopoietic
progenitor cells, stained with c-myb (right top panel, arrow), presumably
arise from the dorsal aorta in zebrafish embryos at 36 hpf. Pro-T cells
probably originate from this area and invade the thymic rudiment. Alcion
blue staining of skeletal elements of the head region in a d7 wild-type
zebrafish shows arches p1 to p7 (left middle panel). Asterisk indicates
the third pharyngeal pouch, where thymus originates. Thymus (right middle
panel, grey arrow) of d7 wild-type zebrafish with heterogeneous cell populations,
consisting of lymphoblasts and thymic epithelial cell. Expression of Rag-1
in d8 wild-type embryo is seen in the olfactory pit (bottom panel, grey
horizontal arrows) and bilateral thymi (arrows).
In adults, the thymus consists of a cortical and medullary compartment
(see Fig.2), as identified by differential expression of Rag-1 and TCR
alpha. Similarly to mammals, thymus involution coincides with sexual maturation.
In the past we have created a number of mutants of thymus development,
and positional cloning of the affected genes in underway.
|
|