Klf6 is required in thymic epithelial cells for normal thymus development [scRNA-seq]
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ABSTRACT: Thymic epithelial cells (TEC) control T cell development and play essential roles in establishing self-tolerance. Transcription factors controlling TEC development are poorly characterized. We report that Klf6 plays a critical role in TEC development. Mice deficient for Klf6 in TEC had a hypoplastic thymus - evident from fetal stages into adulthood. Proliferation of TEC was not reduced, but a dramatic increase in the frequency of apoptotic TEC in fetal and adult thymus was observed. Among cortical TEC (cTEC), we found expansion of a previously unreported cTEC population expressing the transcription factor Sox10. Medullary TEC (mTEC) subsets were not equally impacted with Ccl21a+ mTEC I and Tuft-like mTEC IV being disproportionately affected. Consistent with these TEC defects, naïve conventional T cells and NKT cells were reduced in the spleen, and signs of autoimmunity were evident. Thus, Klf6 has a pro- survival role in TEC and is also required for differentiation of the mTEC I and mTEC IV populations of TEC in adult mice. In this work, we report that mice with Foxn1-Cre mediated ablation of Klf6 in TEC demonstrate thymic hypoplasia beginning from prenatal life and extending through adulthood. Guided by single-cell transcriptional profiling, we determined that loss of Klf6 increased programmed cell death of TEC in prenatal and adult mice. In adult mice, thymic Klf6 deficiency severely impacted the mTEC I and mTEC IV populations. In addition, Klf6 deficiency led to the expansion of a previously uncharacterized cTEC population expressing Sox10 that is present in wild-type mice at very low frequencies. We observed concordant reductions of the naïve αβ T cell and iNKT pools in the periphery of young adult mice. Furthermore, we detected T cell infiltration in salivary and lacrimal glands, indicating defects in T cell tolerance.
ORGANISM(S): Mus musculus
PROVIDER: GSE220270 | GEO | 2023/10/12
REPOSITORIES: GEO
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