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© Institut Pasteur - Photo by Perrine Bomme, Lise Chauveau & Olivier Schwartz, colorized by Jean-Marc Panaud
Cellule dendritique vue en microscopie électronique à balayage. Les cellules dendritiques sont cellules importantes de l'immunité. Elles sont indispensables à la mise en place de défenses contre les agents infectieux, les tumeurs ou les maladies auto-immunes. Elles interviennent également dans les processus de tolérance de greffes.
Publication : Nature immunology

The receptor tyrosine kinase Flt3 is required for dendritic cell development in peripheral lymphoid tissues.

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in Nature immunology - 01 Jun 2008

Waskow C, Liu K, Darrasse-Jèze G, Guermonprez P, Ginhoux F, Merad M, Shengelia T, Yao K, Nussenzweig M

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 18469816

Link to DOI – 10.1038/ni.1615

Nat Immunol 2008 Jun; 9(6): 676-83

Dendritic cell (DC) development begins in the bone marrow but is not completed until after immature progenitors reach their sites of residence in lymphoid organs. The hematopoietic growth factors regulating these processes are poorly understood. Here we examined the effects of signaling by the receptor tyrosine kinase Flt3 on macrophage DC progenitors in the bone marrow and on peripheral DCs. We found that the macrophage DC progenitor compartment was responsive to superphysiological amounts of Flt3 ligand but was not dependent on Flt3 for its homeostatic maintenance in vivo. In contrast, Flt3 was essential to the regulation of homeostatic DC development in the spleen, where it was needed to maintain normal numbers of DCs by controlling their division in the periphery.