MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford

Irving Weissman

Publication Details

  • Dendritic cell development from common myeloid progenitors.

    Manz MG, Traver D, Akashi K, Merad M, Miyamoto T, Engleman EG, Weissman IL. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2001: 938 167-73; discussion 173-4

    Dendritic cells (DCs) are professional antigen-presenting cells which both initiate adaptive immune responses and control tolerance to self-antigens. It has been suggested that these different effects on responder cells depend on subsets of DCs arising from either myeloid or lymphoid hematopoietic origins. In this model, CD8 alpha+ Mac-1- DCs are supposed to be of lymphoid while CD8 alpha- Mac-1+ DCs are supposed to be of myeloid origin. Here we summarize our findings that both CD8 alpha+ and CD8 alpha- DCs can arise from clonogenic common myeloid progenitors (CMPs) in both thymus and spleen. Therefore CD8 alpha expression DCs does not indicate a lymphoid origin and differences among CD8 alpha+ and CD8 alpha- DCs might rather reflect maturation status than ontogeny. On the basis of transplantation studies, it seems likely that most of the DCs in secondary lymphoid organs and a substantial fraction of thymic DCs are myeloid-derived.

    PubMedID: 11458504

Stanford Medicine Resources:

Footer Links: