Hungarian Science Foundation NKFIH grant program(K-138664) Támogató: NKFIH
Szakterületek:
Humán anatómia
The avian bursa of Fabricius (BF) is a primary lymphoid organ, where B-cell development
occurs within bursal follicles of epithelial origin. During embryogenesis the epithelial
anlage of the BF emerges as a diverticulum of the cloaca surrounded by undifferentiated
tail bud mesenchyme. While it is believed that the epithelial-mesenchymal BF primordium
provides a selective microenvironment for developing B cells, the initial events inducing
lymphoid follicle formation are not fully elucidated. Using wild type and CSF1R-eGFP
transgenic chick embryos, we find that separate B cell, macrophage and dendritic cell
precursors enter the BF mesenchyme, migrate to the surface epithelium, and colonize
the lymphoid follicle buds. Detailed immunocytochemical characterization revealed
a novel EIV-E12+ blood-borne cell type, colonizing the surface epithelium of the BF
rudiment before the entry of myeloid and lymphoid lineages and the appearance of this
cell type coincides with the onset of follicle bud formation. Chick-duck chimeras
and chick-quail tissue recombination experiments suggest that EIV-E12+ cells represent
a transient lymphoid inducer cell population. They are not dendritic or B cells precursors,
and they are capable of follicle bud induction in both dendritic cell- and B cell-depleted
bursae.