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Published November 2010 | Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

Multilayered specification of the T-cell lineage fate

Abstract

T-cell development from stem cells has provided a highly accessible and detailed view of the regulatory processes that can go into the choice of a cell fate in a postembryonic, stem cell-based system. But it has been a view from the outside. The problems in understanding the regulatory basis for this lineage choice begin with the fact that too many transcription factors are needed to provide crucial input: without any one of them, T-cell development fails. Furthermore, almost all the factors known to provide crucial functions during the climax of T-lineage commitment itself are also vital for earlier functions that establish the pool of multilineage precursors that would normally feed into the T-cell specification process. When the regulatory genes that encode them are mutated, the confounding effects on earlier stages make it difficult to dissect T-cell specification genetically. Yet both the positive and the negative regulatory events involved in the choice of a T-cell fate are actually a mosaic of distinct functions. New evidence has emerged recently that finally provides a way to separate the major components that fit together to drive this process. Here, we review insights into T-cell specification and commitment that emerge from a combination of molecular, cellular, and systems biology approaches. The results reveal the regulatory structure underlying this lineage decision.

Additional Information

© 2010 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Article first published online: 25 Oct. 2010. We wish to thank Howard Petrie for stimulating discussions of global T-lineage gene expression analysis and for the opportunity to consult valuable unpublished data at an early stage, and Eric Davidson for insightful comments about commitment networks. We thank current and former members of the Rothenberg group for sharing unpublished data and valuable discussions, and Diana Perez and Rochelle Diamond of the Caltech Flow Cytometry and Cell Sorting Facility for tireless help with sorting. This work was supported by a fellowship from the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine to L. L., grants from NIH to E. V. R. (RC2 CA148278, R33 HL089123, and R01 CA90233), the Caltech–City of Hope Biomedical Initiative, the Louis Garfinkle Memorial Laboratory Fund, the Al Sherman Foundation, and the A. B. Ruddock Professorship.

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