Petrie Howard T
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY 10021, USA.
Immunol Rev. 2002 Nov;189:8-19. doi: 10.1034/j.1600-065x.2002.18902.x.
The most conspicuous period of cellular proliferation and differentiation occurs during the embryonic stage of development. In some cell lineages, however, including T lymphocytes, this process must continue postnatally and throughout life. Under ordinary circumstances, postnatal T-cell production occurs in the thymus, and can be separated into five functional phases. The first is recognition of thymus-derived recruitment signals by multilineage progenitors in the bloodstream, followed by their extravasation and entry into the organ. Second is the lymphopoietic process, i.e. the expansion of this small number of blood-derived progenitors to produce the raw materials for all subsequent phases. Third is the screening of these cellular products for the ability of their T-cell receptors to appropriately recognize major histocompatibility/peptide ligands, i.e. positive and negative selection. Fourth is functional maturation, a process that follows but is distinct from positive selection. Finally, cells that successfully undergo all of the prior processes must be induced to leave the thymus and enter the peripheral lymphoid pool. From the above, it can be seen that all the hematopoietic components of the thymus are transient, with uncommitted progenitors entering and lineage committed progeny being exported or removed. This process reveals a subtle but critically important fact about the nature of the thymus, namely that the functional components of the thymus are not the hemato-lymphoid cells, but rather the stable (stromal) elements that induce their differentiation. Understanding the nature of these stromal elements, and the signals they deliver to nascent T lymphocytes, is therefore critical not only for understanding how T lymphocytes are produced normally but, by analogy, what goes wrong in congenital, acquired, or age-associated deficiencies in T-lymphocyte production.
细胞增殖和分化最显著的时期发生在胚胎发育阶段。然而,在包括T淋巴细胞在内的一些细胞谱系中,这个过程在出生后及整个生命过程中都必须持续。在正常情况下,出生后T细胞的产生发生在胸腺中,并且可以分为五个功能阶段。第一个阶段是血液中的多谱系祖细胞识别胸腺来源的募集信号,随后它们渗出并进入器官。第二个阶段是淋巴细胞生成过程,即扩增这一小部分源自血液的祖细胞,以产生所有后续阶段的原材料。第三个阶段是筛选这些细胞产物,看其T细胞受体是否有能力适当识别主要组织相容性/肽配体,即阳性和阴性选择。第四个阶段是功能成熟,这是一个在阳性选择之后但与之不同的过程。最后,成功经历了所有先前过程的细胞必须被诱导离开胸腺并进入外周淋巴库。从上述内容可以看出,胸腺的所有造血成分都是短暂的,未定向的祖细胞进入,而定向的谱系后代则被输出或清除。这个过程揭示了一个关于胸腺本质的微妙但至关重要的事实,即胸腺的功能成分不是血液淋巴细胞,而是诱导它们分化的稳定(基质)成分。因此,了解这些基质成分的本质以及它们传递给新生T淋巴细胞的信号,不仅对于理解T淋巴细胞的正常产生方式至关重要,而且通过类推,对于理解先天性、获得性或与年龄相关的T淋巴细胞产生缺陷中出现的问题也至关重要。