The Thymus Regeneration Paradox: The Search for Stemness in an Involuting Organ
Roberta Ragazzini, Paola Bonfanti

TL;DR
This review explores how the thymus, an aging organ, can regenerate and the role of stem cells in its function and potential for medical applications.
Contribution
The paper highlights the paradox of thymus regeneration and the evolving understanding of thymic stem cells and their regenerative potential.
Findings
The thymus contains cells capable of expanding in culture and reconstituting organ function despite its involution.
Epithelial progenitor/stem cell potency changes with age or injury, affecting thymus regeneration.
Key questions remain about thymus regeneration in children and the components needed for T cell production outside the body.
Abstract
The thymus is emerging as a model for studying organ regeneration and stem cell biology. While research has long focused on how antigen‐presenting cells shape the T cell repertoire, recent discoveries unveil a far richer cellular landscape that challenges long‐held views of thymus structure and function. This review traces the history of early thymic reconstitution assays, the paradigm of clonal stem cells and serial transplantation, assessing evidence for “stemness” within the thymus. A key focus is the paradox that an involuting thymus retains cells able to expand in culture and reconstitute organ function. We differentiate embryonic/fetal thymus development from postnatal homeostasis, emphasizing how the potency of epithelial progenitor/stem cells shifts with age or upon injury. The role of mesenchymal/interstitial cells and the extracellular milieu is considered alongside advances…
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Taxonomy
TopicsT-cell and B-cell Immunology · Myasthenia Gravis and Thymoma · Immunotoxicology and immune responses
