Foxn1 Regulates Lineage Progression in Cortical and Medullary Thymic Epithelial Cells But Is Dispensable for Medullary Sublineage Divergence

Craig S. Nowell(University of Edinburgh), Nicholas Bredenkamp(MRC Centre for Regenerative Medicine), Stéphanie Tételin(University of Edinburgh), Xin Jin(MRC Centre for Regenerative Medicine), Christin Tischner(MRC Centre for Regenerative Medicine), Harsh Vaidya(MRC Centre for Regenerative Medicine), Julie M. Sheridan(MRC Centre for Regenerative Medicine), Frances H. Stenhouse(MRC Centre for Regenerative Medicine), Raphaela Heussen(MRC Centre for Regenerative Medicine), Andrew J. H. Smith(MRC Centre for Regenerative Medicine), Clare Blackburn(University of Edinburgh)
PLoS Genetics
November 3, 2011
Cited by 160Open Access
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Abstract

The forkhead transcription factor Foxn1 is indispensable for thymus development, but the mechanisms by which it mediates thymic epithelial cell (TEC) development are poorly understood. To examine the cellular and molecular basis of Foxn1 function, we generated a novel and revertible hypomorphic allele of Foxn1. By varying levels of its expression, we identified a number of features of the Foxn1 system. Here we show that Foxn1 is a powerful regulator of TEC differentiation that is required at multiple intermediate stages of TE lineage development in the fetal and adult thymus. We find no evidence for a role for Foxn1 in TEC fate-choice. Rather, we show it is required for stable entry into both the cortical and medullary TEC differentiation programmes and subsequently is needed at increasing dosage for progression through successive differentiation states in both cortical and medullary TEC. We further demonstrate regulation by Foxn1 of a suite of genes with diverse roles in thymus development and/or function, suggesting it acts as a master regulator of the core thymic epithelial programme rather than regulating a particular aspect of TEC biology. Overall, our data establish a genetics-based model of cellular hierarchies in the TE lineage and provide mechanistic insight relating titration of a single transcription factor to control of lineage progression. Our novel revertible hypomorph system may be similarly applied to analyzing other regulators of development.


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