How the thymus shaped immunology
The function of the thymus was discovered by Jacques Miller in 1961 and laid a foundation for immunology and modern medicine. Until that time, researchers mistakenly believed the thymus merely represented a remnant of defunct lymph tissue, something of an immune cell graveyard. In a Review, Miller recounts the seminal experiments and conceptual thinking that led to uncovering the critical function of the thymus and provides insights that can be learned from those early days. How knowledge of thymus function subsequently spawned the field of T cell biology and the impact it has had on immune cell interactions, vaccination, cancer immunotherapy, and the microbiome are also discussed.
Science, this issue p. eaba2429
Until the 1960s, the thymus had long remained an enigmatic organ with no known function or was considered to be just a graveyard for dying lymphocytes. By contrast, the circulating small lymphocytes found in blood and lymph had been shown in the late 1950s to be long-lived cells able to initiate an immune response when appropriately stimulated by antigen. However, although the thymus was known to be populated with lymphocytes, immunologists had not attributed any immune function to the organ. There were many reasons for this. For example, the cytological hallmarks of an immune response, such as the presence of plasma cells and germinal centers, were not seen in the thymus of healthy animals even after extensive immunization. Thymus lymphocytes, unlike lymphocytes from blood and lymphoid tissues, were unable to mount an immune response on transfer to immunocompromised recipients. Furthermore, thymectomy, which had always been performed in adult animals, was not associated with any immune defects.
In 1961, thymectomy was performed in mice during the immediate neonatal period and revealed the critically important function of the thymus in enabling the development of the immune system. Neonatally thymectomized (NTx) mice were highly susceptible to intercurrent infections, deficient in lymphocytes, unable to reject foreign skin grafts or produce antibody to some (though not all) antigens, and prone to developing certain tumors. There was no major immune defect after adult thymectomy unless the lymphoid tissues had been damaged by total body irradiation. Implanting thymus tissue into NTx mice or irradiated adult thymectomized mice restored immune function. When the thymus graft was taken from a foreign strain, the thymectomized recipients were found to be specifically tolerant of the histocompatibility antigens of the donor. This implied that the thymus was responsible not only for the normal development of immune functions but also for imposing tolerance to the bodys own tissues.
The thymus was shown to seed the lymphoid system with T lymphocytes that migrated to certain discrete areas of the lymphoid tissues and recirculated from the blood through lymphoid tissues, lymph, and back to the bloodstream. T cells exiting the thymus were found to be responsible for killing infected cells and for rejecting foreign tissue grafts. Therefore, T cells could soon be subdivided into subsets based on function, cell surface markers, and secreted products or interleukins. Thymus lymphoid stem cells were subsequently identified, and the epithelial and dendritic cells in the thymus were shown to greatly influence T cell development. They were able to educate T cells to recognize a great diversity of peptide antigens bound to the bodys own markers, major histocompatibility complex molecules, but purged any T cells that strongly reacted against the bodys own self-components. The use of irradiated adult thymectomized mice showed that T cells were not the precursors of antibody-forming cells but were essential to help, through some type of collaboration, other lymphocytes originating in bone marrow (B cells) to respond to antigen by producing antibody.
The discovery of thymus function and of T and B cell collaboration was a major immunological milestone because it not only opened up the field of immune cell interactions but also changed the course of immunology and medicine. It promoted the need for all immune phenomena, for example, memory, tolerance, autoimmunity, and immunodeficiency, as well as inflammatory and immunopathological disease conditions, to be reassessed in terms of the role played by the two distinct sets of lymphocytes and their subsets. We now know that T cells are involved in the entire spectrum of tissue physiology and pathology and even in situations not considered to be bona fide immunological conditions, such as tissue repair, dysbiosis, eclampsia, senescence, and cancer.
Hemopoietic stem cells originating in the yolk sac, fetal liver, or bone marrow migrate through the blood to the thymus, where they differentiate into T lymphocytes. Others differentiate within the bone marrow in mammals, or the bursa of Fabricius in birds, to produce B cells. Mature T and B cells circulate in the blood and lymph and colonize the T and B cell compartments of the lymphoid tissues.
The lymphoid system is intimately involved in immunological processes. The small lymphocyte that circulates through blood into lymphoid tissues, then through the lymph and back to the blood through the thoracic duct, is able to initiate immune responses after appropriate stimulation by antigen. However, the lymphocytes found in the thymus are deficient in this ability despite the fact that the thymus plays a central role in lymphocyte production and in ensuring the normal development of immunological faculty. During embryogenesis, lymphocytes are present in the thymus before they can be identified in the circulation and in other lymphoid tissues. They become educated in the thymus to recognize a great diversity of peptide antigens bound to the bodys own marker antigen, the major histocompatibility complex, but they are purged if they strongly react against their own self-components. Lymphocytes differentiate to become various T cell subsets and then exit through the bloodstream to populate certain areas of the lymphoid system as peripheral T lymphocytes with distinct markers and immune functions.
Visit link:
The function of the thymus and its impact on modern medicine - Science
- Revolutionizing Success in the Cell Therapy Regenerative - openPR.com - April 4th, 2025
- 5 Best Stem Cell Companies to Invest In (April 2025) - Securities.io - April 4th, 2025
- Boys with cancer can face infertility as adults. Can storing their stem cells help? - Ravalli Republic - April 4th, 2025
- Tip Sheet: Nutrition for People Receiving Stem Cell Transplants, Art Therapy for Cancer Patients, Treating a Rare Type of Colon Cancer and Graduate... - April 4th, 2025
- Human Organoid Market is Set to Revolutionize Drug Discovery and Disease Modeling - openPR.com - April 1st, 2025
- Doctors Told Him He Was Going to Die. Then A.I. Saved His Life. - The New York Times - March 24th, 2025
- Japan team says stem cell treatment helped improve spinal cord injuries | NHK WORLD-JAPAN News - NHK WORLD - March 22nd, 2025
- Boost in cancer treatment: PGI working on lab for stem cell, gene therapies - The Times of India - March 19th, 2025
- Stem Cell Stocks on the Rise: Companies Driving the $48 Billion Market Boom - openPR - March 19th, 2025
- Neuroregeneration Therapy Market Forecasted to Expand at 5.3% CAGR, Reaching USD 64.8 Billion by 2034 - Transparency Market Research, Inc -... - March 19th, 2025
- Cell Therapy Market Surges as Breakthrough Innovations Transform Regenerative Medicine - openPR - March 17th, 2025
- Infinite Health Integrative Medicine Center Fights Chronic Pain with Stem Cell Prolotherapy - PR Newswire - March 14th, 2025
- Stem Cell and Exosome Innovations at Infinite Health Integrative Medicine Center Offers New Hope for Parkinson's Disease - PR Newswire - March 14th, 2025
- Adia Nutrition Hunts for Top Sales Talent to Power Adia Med and Adia Labs Expansion - TradingView - March 14th, 2025
- Cell Therapy Market Poised for Exponential Growth, Projected to Reach USD 44.6 Billion by 2034 - openPR - March 14th, 2025
- Trial Repairs Irreversible Corneal Damage With Stem Cell Therapy - Anti Aging News - March 11th, 2025
- Advancing Regenerative Medicine: A Comprehensive Outlook on the Global Cell Therapy Market - openPR - March 7th, 2025
- Top 3 Grants in Regenerative Medicine: February 2025 - RegMedNet - March 7th, 2025
- The future of cell therapy: scaling production for global reach - Drug Target Review - March 7th, 2025
- Stem Cell Therapy Repairs Corneal Damage in Trial - Mirage News - March 7th, 2025
- Autologous Cell Therapy Market Anticipated to Hit USD 12.1 Billion by 2031: Persistence Market Research Study - openPR - March 7th, 2025
- Regenerative Therapies Market Forecast to Reach USD 24.41 Billion by 2033 - Persistence Market Research - openPR - March 5th, 2025
- This Japanese Regenerative Medicine Company Just Secured Its Path to NASDAQ Through a $242M Deal - StockTitan - March 5th, 2025
- Ryoncil, the first FDA-approved mesenchymal stromal cell therapy - Yahoo - March 5th, 2025
- Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market Forecast to Reach USD 437.3 - openPR - March 3rd, 2025
- A Navy SEALs Journey to Stem Cell Treatment: The Future of Medicine is Here, Just Not in America - SOFREP - March 3rd, 2025
- InnovationRx: Eli Lilly Has Stockpiled Nearly $550 Million Of Its Next Obesity Drug - Forbes - March 3rd, 2025
- VUMC Part of New Study Validating Curative Therapy for Sickle Cell Disease A - Wgnsradio - March 1st, 2025
- Advancing Stem Cell Therapy and Equity in Patient Care - Targeted Oncology - February 27th, 2025
- How Stem Cell Treatment Reversed A Pro Athlete's Life-threatening Long COVID Disease When all Other treatment Failed - Medical Tourism Magazine - February 27th, 2025
- Allogeneic Cell Therapy Market Size to Hit USD 4,677.38 Million by 203 - BioSpace - February 27th, 2025
- Bringing Fibroblasts to the Spotlight: Q&A with FibroBiologics - Pharmaceutical Executive - February 27th, 2025
- Mount Sinai-Led Research Team Identifies Underlying Mechanisms of Age-Related Dysfunction in Glands Crucial to Eye Function | Newswise - Newswise - February 25th, 2025
- Experts explore the future of iPSC-based cell therapies - Drug Target Review - February 19th, 2025
- Longeveron Announces World Health Organization Approval of laromestrocel as International Non-proprietary Name for Stem Cell Therapy Lomecel-B -... - February 19th, 2025
- The impact of cytokines on stem cells and organoid research in drug discovery - News-Medical.Net - February 19th, 2025
- Revolutionary FDA-Approved Stem Cell Partnership Puts Adia Med at Forefront of Regenerative Medicine - StockTitan - February 19th, 2025
- Bahrain Makes History with First Successful CRISPR-Based Sickle Cell Treatment Outside the US - BioSpace - February 19th, 2025
- Bahrain's pioneering use of sickle cell disease treatment hailed by medical experts - The National - February 19th, 2025
- Uganda Treats First Patient Using Stem Cell Therapy - AllAfrica - Top Africa News - February 19th, 2025
- Bahrain Makes History with First Successful CRISPR-Based Sickle Cell Treatment Outside the US - StreetInsider.com - February 17th, 2025
- Diversity of Cells Allow Colon Cancer to Resist Treatment and To Metastasize - MedicalResearch.com - February 15th, 2025
- Survival outcomes between haploidentical stem cell transplantation and chemotherapy for blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm - Nature.com - February 13th, 2025
- Experimental cell therapy trial treats first Sjgrens disease patient - University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health - February 11th, 2025
- Stem Cell Therapy Market Types, Applications, Share, Growth - openPR - February 6th, 2025
- Placental Stem Cell Therapy Solution Market Size And Booming - openPR - February 6th, 2025
- Revitalizing Health with Stem Cell Therapy: A Groundbreaking Path To Longevity and Wellness - openPR - February 4th, 2025
- Gene therapy offers new hope for sickle cell disease patients - Open Access Government - February 4th, 2025
- Scientists trial implant to patch up the heart - BBC.com - February 2nd, 2025
- Cell Therapy Market Size is Projected to Reach USD 33.93 - GlobeNewswire - January 28th, 2025
- Meet the California Institute Pushing Stem Cell & Gene Therapy Research: Part 3 - The Medicine Maker - January 28th, 2025
- Immusoft to Present Positive Data from the First Engineered B Cell in a Human Clinical Trial at the 21st Annual WorldSymposium 2025 - The Eastern... - January 28th, 2025
- Beyond the Lab: Stem cell research - Drug Target Review - January 25th, 2025
- Asia Pacific Stem Cell Therapy Market to Reach US$ 4,075.75 Million by 2033 with a Robust CAGR of 10.29% - openPR - January 25th, 2025
- Exciting data: S.Biomedics preps US IND of PD cell therapy - BioWorld Online - January 25th, 2025
- $24.85 Billion Cell Therapy Market Forecast by 2032 (CAGR 20.4%) - openPR - January 25th, 2025
- Stem Cell Therapy Market Expected to Expand at a Steady 2025-2032 - openPR - January 25th, 2025
- Regenerative Medicine Market to receive overwhelming hike US$ 164.9 billion in Revenues by 2032, Growing at a CAGR of 23.30% From 2024 to 2032 -... - January 25th, 2025
- Alternative medicine fans see RFK Jr. as a hero. The fields skeptics worry. - The Washington Post - January 23rd, 2025
- U.S. PRP and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market Analysis 2025-2030 by Treatment, Indication, and End-use - Androgenic Alopecia Dominated the Market... - January 23rd, 2025
- The Future of Regenerative Medicine Lies in the Hands of Chiropractors - Dynamic Chiropractic - January 23rd, 2025
- Stem Cell Therapy Industry Dynamics and Contributions by RTI - openPR - January 21st, 2025
- Stem Cells Market to Reach USD 44.27 Billion by 2033, Driven by Expanding Applications and Innovations - openPR - January 21st, 2025
- Organoids at the Forefront Innovations in Stem Cell Research and Precision Medicine - openPR - January 21st, 2025
- The promising future of regenerative medicine - Yahoo Finance - January 17th, 2025
- An earful of gill: USC Stem Cell study points to the evolutionary origin of the mammalian outer ear - EurekAlert - January 11th, 2025
- Aspen Partners with Mytos to Automate Stem Cell Production for Parkinsons Therapy - Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News - January 9th, 2025
- School of Medicine professor receives grant to study improved cancer treatments - Mercer University - January 9th, 2025
- Meet CIRM: the California Institute Pushing Stem Cell and Gene Therapy Research: Part 1 - The Medicine Maker - January 7th, 2025
- Regenerative Medicine Market to Experience Significant Growth, Projected to Reach $183.08 Billion by 2031. - openPR - January 7th, 2025
- Stem-cell therapies that work: 10 Breakthrough Technologies 2025 - MIT Technology Review - January 5th, 2025
- 1st stem cell therapy, new HIV drug approved - ecns - January 5th, 2025
- Science fiction turned reality? Stem cell therapy set to repair child's heart - Ynetnews - January 3rd, 2025
- Stem Health Plus Revolutionizes Skin Regeneration with Advanced Stem Cell Skin Graft Technology - The Manila Times - January 1st, 2025
- Allogeneic Stem Cell Transplantation Market Size to Expand Lucratively by 2031 - openPR - January 1st, 2025
- Apoptotic clearance by stem cells: molecular mechanisms for recognition and phagocytosis of dead cells - Nature.com - December 30th, 2024
- Why Medical Tourists are Choosing Mexico: The Affordable Alternative for Advanced Stem Cell Treatments - openPR - December 30th, 2024
- Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells (iPSC) Production Market: Trends, Growth, and the Role of AI - openPR - December 30th, 2024
- Stem cells 'instructed' to form specific tissues and organs - New Atlas - December 28th, 2024
- Stem Cell Transplantation Still the Main Treatment Option for Beta-Thalassemia - Medpage Today - December 28th, 2024
Recent Comments