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2030-01-01
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- IOC - Artigos de Periódicos [12973]
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ORGANIZING THE THYMUS GLAND: THE ROLE OF EPH AND EPHRINS
Author
Affilliation
Complutense University. Faculty of Biology. Depatrment of Cell Biology. Madrid, Spain.
Complutense University. Faculty of Biology. Department of Cell Biology. Madrid, Spain.
Complutense University. Faculty of Biology. Department of Cell Biology. Madrid, Spain.
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Instituto Oswaldo Cruz. Laboratório de Pesquisa sobre o Timo. Rio de Janeiro, RJ. Brasil.
Complutense University. Faculty of Biology. Department of Cell Biology. Madrid, Spain.
Complutense University. Faculty of Biology. Depatment of Medicine. Madrid, Spain.
Complutense University. Faculty of Biology. Depatment of Cell Biology. Madrid, Spain.
Complutense University. Faculty of Biology. Department of Cell Biology. Madrid, Spain.
Complutense University. Faculty of Biology. Department of Cell Biology. Madrid, Spain.
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Instituto Oswaldo Cruz. Laboratório de Pesquisa sobre o Timo. Rio de Janeiro, RJ. Brasil.
Complutense University. Faculty of Biology. Department of Cell Biology. Madrid, Spain.
Complutense University. Faculty of Biology. Depatment of Medicine. Madrid, Spain.
Complutense University. Faculty of Biology. Depatment of Cell Biology. Madrid, Spain.
Abstract
Eph receptors and their ligands, ephrins, are molecules involved in the morphogenesis of numerous tissues, including the central nervous system in which they play a key role in determining cell positioning and tissue domains containing or excluding nerve fibers. Because common features have been suggested to occur in the microenvironmental organization of brain and thymus, a highly compartmentalized organ central for T cell differentiation, we examined the expression and possible role of Eph/ephrins in the biology of the thymus gland. We reviewed numerous in vivo and in vitro results that confirm a role for Eph and ephrins in the maturation of the thymic epithelial cell (TEC) network and T cell differentiation. Their possible involvement in different steps of early thymus organogenesis, including thymus primordium branching, lymphoid colonization, and thymocyte-TEC interactions, that determine the organization of a mature three-dimensional thymic epithelial network is also analyzed.
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