AI Article Synopsis

  • Endogenous thymic regeneration is essential for the immune system's recovery after stress, infection, or damage, and understanding how this process works can lead to new therapies.
  • The study found that high apoptosis levels hinder regeneration, while reducing damaged apoptotic thymocytes can promote it, and that metabolic changes in thymocytes post-radiation lead to a specific type of cell death.
  • A key molecule, ATP, activates the P2Y2 receptor on thymic epithelial cells, enhancing a transcription factor vital for thymus function; targeting this receptor can enhance thymus regeneration after damage.

Article Abstract

Endogenous thymic regeneration is a crucial process that allows for the renewal of immune competence following stress, infection or cytoreductive conditioning. Fully understanding the molecular mechanisms driving regeneration will uncover therapeutic targets to enhance regeneration. We previously demonstrated that high levels of homeostatic apoptosis suppress regeneration and that a reduction in the presence of damage-induced apoptotic thymocytes facilitates regeneration. Here we identified that cell-specific metabolic remodeling after ionizing radiation steers thymocytes towards mitochondrial-driven pyroptotic cell death. We further identified that a key damage-associated molecular pattern (DAMP), ATP, stimulates the cell surface purinergic receptor P2Y2 on cortical thymic epithelial cells (cTECs) acutely after damage, enhancing expression of , the critical thymic transcription factor. Targeting the P2Y2 receptor with the agonist UTPγS promotes rapid regeneration of the thymus following acute damage. Together these data demonstrate that intrinsic metabolic regulation of pyruvate processing is a critical process driving thymus repair and identifies the P2Y2 receptor as a novel molecular therapeutic target to enhance thymus regeneration.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9882324PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.01.19.524800DOI Listing

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