Genomic deletion of GIT2 induces a premature age-related thymic dysfunction and systemic immune system disruption.

dc.contributor.author

Siddiqui, Sana

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Lustig, Ana

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Carter, Arnell

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Sankar, Mathavi

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Daimon, Caitlin M

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Premont, Richard T

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Etienne, Harmonie

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van Gastel, Jaana

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Azmi, Abdelkrim

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Janssens, Jonathan

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Becker, Kevin G

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Zhang, Yongqing

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Wood, William

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Lehrmann, Elin

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Martin, James G

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Martin, Bronwen

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Taub, Dennis D

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Maudsley, Stuart

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United States

dc.date.accessioned

2017-05-01T13:33:10Z

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2017-05-01T13:33:10Z

dc.date.issued

2017-03-04

dc.description.abstract

Recent research has proposed that GIT2 (G protein-coupled receptor kinase interacting protein 2) acts as an integrator of the aging process through regulation of 'neurometabolic' integrity. One of the commonly accepted hallmarks of the aging process is thymic involution. At a relatively young age, 12 months old, GIT2(-/-) mice present a prematurely distorted thymic structure and dysfunction compared to age-matched 12 month-old wild-type control (C57BL/6) mice. Disruption of thymic structure in GIT2(-/-) (GIT2KO) mice was associated with a significant reduction in the expression of the cortical thymic marker, Troma-I (cytokeratin 8). Double positive (CD4(+)CD8(+)) and single positive CD4(+) T cells were also markedly reduced in 12 month-old GIT2KO mice compared to age-matched control wild-type mice. Coincident with this premature thymic disruption in GIT2KO mice was the unique generation of a novel cervical 'organ', i.e. 'parathymic lobes'. These novel organs did not exhibit classical peripheral lymph node-like characteristics but expressed high levels of T cell progenitors that were reflexively reduced in GIT2KO thymi. Using signaling pathway analysis of GIT2KO thymus and parathymic lobe transcriptomic data we found that the molecular signaling functions lost in the dysfunctional GIT2KO thymus were selectively reinstated in the novel parathymic lobe - suggestive of a compensatory effect for the premature thymic disruption. Broader inspection of high-dimensionality transcriptomic data from GIT2KO lymph nodes, spleen, thymus and parathymic lobes revealed a systemic alteration of multiple proteins (Dbp, Tef, Per1, Per2, Fbxl3, Ddit4, Sin3a) involved in the multidimensional control of cell cycle clock regulation, cell senescence, cellular metabolism and DNA damage. Altered cell clock regulation across both immune and non-immune tissues therefore may be responsible for the premature 'aging' phenotype of GIT2KO mice.

dc.identifier

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28260693

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101185

dc.identifier.eissn

1945-4589

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/14223

dc.language

eng

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Impact Journals, LLC

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Aging (Albany NY)

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10.18632/aging.101185

dc.subject

CXCR4

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GIT2

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T cell differentiation

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aging

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bioinformatics

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clock

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metabolism

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thymic involution

dc.title

Genomic deletion of GIT2 induces a premature age-related thymic dysfunction and systemic immune system disruption.

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Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Premont, Richard T|0000-0002-8053-5026

pubs.author-url

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28260693

pubs.begin-page

706

pubs.end-page

740

pubs.issue

3

pubs.organisational-group

Clinical Science Departments

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Duke

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Duke Institute for Brain Sciences

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Institutes and Provost's Academic Units

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Medicine

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Medicine, Gastroenterology

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School of Medicine

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University Institutes and Centers

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

9

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