Thymic mesenchymal niche cells drive T cell immune regeneration
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Abstract
Thymic atrophy and the progressive immune decline that accompanies it is a major health problem, chronically with age and acutely with immune injury. No solution has been defined. Here we demonstrate that one of the three mesenchymal cell subsets identified by single-cell analysis of human and mouse thymic stroma is a critical niche component for T lymphopoiesis. The Postn+ subset is located perivascularly in the cortical-medullary junction, medulla and subcapsular regions. Cell depletion demonstrated that it recruits T competent cells to the thymus and initiates T lymphopoiesis in vivo . This subset distinctively expresses the chemokine Ccl19 necessary for niche functions. It markedly declines with age and in the acute setting of hematopoietic stem cell transplant conditioning. When isolated and adoptively transferred, these cells durably engrafted the atrophic thymus, recruited early T progenitors, increased T cell neogenesis, expanded TCR complexity and enhanced T cell response to vaccination. These data define a thymus lymphopoietic niche cell type that may be manipulated therapeutically to regenerate T lymphopoiesis.
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- last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00