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DOI: 10.1677/joe.0.1760305

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Journal of Endocrinology, Vol 176, Issue 3, 305-311
Copyright © 2003 by Society for Endocrinology


Articles

Quantification of T cell receptor rearrangement excision circles to estimate thymic function: an important new tool for endocrine-immune physiology

V Geenen, JF Poulin, ML Dion, H Martens, E Castermans, Hansenne I, M Moutschen, RP Sekaly, and R Cheynier


Although the thymus constitutes a target organ for most protein and steroid hormones, it has been quite difficult to determine the precise control exerted in vivo by the endocrine system upon thymic function. The biological role of the thymus is to ensure the generation of a diversified population of peripheral T cells able to respond to non-self-antigens but nevertheless tolerant to self-antigens. For a long time, thymic function could not be monitored, as a consequence of the absence of adequate technology to differentiate recent thymic emigrants from naive T cells. The generation of T cell receptor (TCR) diversity occurs in the thymus through recombination of gene segments encoding the variable parts of the TCR alpha and beta chains. During these processes, by-products of the rearrangements are generated in the form of TCR excision circles (TRECs). As these molecules are lost upon further cell division, their quantification is actually considered as a very valuable tool to estimate thymic function. The most appropriate TREC is deltaRec-Psi(J)alpha TREC or signal joint TREC resulting from deltaRec-Psi(J)alpha rearrangement (TCRD deletion) that occurs late during thymopoiesis, before V(alpha)-J(alpha) rearrangement. Here we describe how TREC quantification is a powerful and reliable method to evaluate the impact of hormones and endocrine disorders upon thymic function.


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M.-L. Dion, R. Bordi, J. Zeidan, R. Asaad, M.-R. Boulassel, J.-P. Routy, M. M. Lederman, R.-P. Sekaly, and R. Cheynier
Slow disease progression and robust therapy-mediated CD4+ T-cell recovery are associated with efficient thymopoiesis during HIV-1 infection
Blood, April 1, 2007; 109(7): 2912 - 2920.
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