IL-7 is a central cytokine in the development of hematopoietic cells, although interspecies discrepancies have been reported. By coculturing human postnatal thymus hematopoietic progenitors and OP9-huDL1 stromal cells, we found that murine IL-7 is ∼100-fold less potent than human IL-7 for supporting human T cell development in vitro. We investigated the role of human IL-7 in newborn BALB/c Rag2-/-γc-/-mice transplanted with human hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) as an in vivo model of human hematopoiesis using three approaches to improve IL-7 signaling: administration of human IL-7, ectopic expression of human IL-7 by the transplanted human HSC, or enforced expression of a murine/human chimeric IL-7 receptor binding murine IL-7. We show that premature IL-7 signaling at the HSC stage, before entrance in the thymus, impeded T cell development, whereas increased intrathymic IL-7 signaling significantly enhanced the maintenance of immature thymocytes. Increased thymopoiesis was also observed when we transplanted BCL-2- or BCL-xL-transduced human HSC. Homeostasis of peripheral mature T cells in this humanized mouse model was not improved by any of these strategies. Overall, our results provide evidence for an important role of IL-7 in human T cell development in vivo and highlight the notion that IL-7 availability is but one of many signals that condition peripheral T cell homeostasis. Copyright

doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.0902019, hdl.handle.net/1765/25454
Journal of Immunology
Erasmus MC: University Medical Center Rotterdam

van Lent, A., Dontje, W., Nagasawa, M., Siamari, R., Bakker, A., Pouw, S., … Legrand, N. (2009). IL-7 enhances thymic human T cell development in "human immune system" Rag2-/-IL-2Rγc-/- mice without affecting peripheral T cell homeostasis. Journal of Immunology, 183(12), 7645–7655. doi:10.4049/jimmunol.0902019