
Central tolerance is critical in establishing a peripheralT‐cell repertoire purged of functional autoreactiveT cells. One of the major requirements for effective central tolerance is the presentation of self and other innocuous antigens (Ags), including food, gut flora, or airway allergens, to developingTcells in the thymus. This seemingly challenging task can be mediated in some cases by ectopic expression of tissue‐specificAgs by thymic epithelial cells or by entry of systemic blood‐borneAgs into the thymus. More recently, thymic homing peripheral dendritic cells (DCs) have been proposed as cellular transporters of peripheral tissue‐specificAgs or foreign innocuousAgs. The aim of this viewpoint is to discuss the three principal thymicDCpopulations and their trafficking properties in the context of central tolerance. We will first discuss the importance of peripheralDCtrafficking to the thymus and then compare and contrast the threeDCsubsets. We will describe how they were characterized, describe their trafficking to and their microenvironmental positioning in the thymus, and discuss the functional consequence of thymic trafficking and localization on thymic selection events.
Antigen Presentation, T-Lymphocytes, Cell Differentiation, Dendritic Cells, Thymus Gland, Autoantigens, Cell Movement, Organ Specificity, Central Tolerance, Animals, Humans, Clonal Selection, Antigen-Mediated
Antigen Presentation, T-Lymphocytes, Cell Differentiation, Dendritic Cells, Thymus Gland, Autoantigens, Cell Movement, Organ Specificity, Central Tolerance, Animals, Humans, Clonal Selection, Antigen-Mediated
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