The earliest thymic T cell progenitors sustain B cell and myeloid lineage potential

Sidinh Luc(John Radcliffe Hospital), Tiago C. Luís(John Radcliffe Hospital), Hanane Boukarabila(University of Oxford), Iain C. Macaulay(John Radcliffe Hospital), Natalija Buza-Vidas(MRC Centre for Regenerative Medicine), Tiphaine Bouriez‐Jones(University of Oxford), Michael Lutteropp(MRC Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine), Petter Woll(University of Oxford), Stephen J. Loughran(John Radcliffe Hospital), Adam J. Mead(John Radcliffe Hospital), Anne Hultquist(Lund University), John Brown(University of Oxford), Takuo Mizukami(University of Oxford), Sahoko Matsuoka(University of Oxford), Helen Ferry(University of Oxford), Kristina Anderson(Lund University), Sara Duarte(University of Oxford), Deborah Atkinson(John Radcliffe Hospital), Shamit Soneji(University of Oxford), Aniela Domanski(University of Oxford), Alison Farley(MRC Centre for Regenerative Medicine), Alejandra Sanjuán-Pla(MRC Centre for Regenerative Medicine), Cintia Carella(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Roger Patient(University of Oxford), Marella de Bruijn(University of Oxford), Tariq Enver(University of Oxford), Claus Nerlov(MRC Centre for Regenerative Medicine), Clare Blackburn(MRC Centre for Regenerative Medicine), Isabelle Godin(Inserm), Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen(University of Oxford)
Nature Immunology
February 19, 2012
Cited by 149Open Access
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