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Showing papers by "Dong-Ming Su published in 2001"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that application of γ-secretase inhibitors to fetal thymus organ cultures interferes with T cell development in a manner consistent with loss or reduction of Notch1 function, and this system presents a system in which rapid evaluation of ιsecretase-targeted pharmaceuticals for their ability to inhibit Notch activity can be performed in a relevant context.
Abstract: A major therapeutic target in the search for a cure to the devastating Alzheimer9s disease is γ-secretase. This activity resides in a multiprotein enzyme complex responsible for the generation of Aβ42 peptides, precipitates of which are thought to cause the disease. γ-Secretase is also a critical component of the Notch signal transduction pathway; Notch signals regulate development and differentiation of adult self-renewing cells. This has led to the hypothesis that therapeutic inhibition of γ-secretase may interfere with Notch-related processes in adults, most alarmingly in hematopoiesis. Here, we show that application of γ-secretase inhibitors to fetal thymus organ cultures interferes with T cell development in a manner consistent with loss or reduction of Notch1 function. Progression from an immature CD4 − /CD8 − state to an intermediate CD4 + /CD8 + double-positive state was repressed. Furthermore, treatment beginning later at the double-positive stage specifically inhibited CD8 + single-positive maturation but did not affect CD4 + single-positive cells. These results demonstrate that pharmacological γ-secretase inhibition recapitulates Notch1 loss in a vertebrate tissue and present a system in which rapid evaluation of γ-secretase-targeted pharmaceuticals for their ability to inhibit Notch activity can be performed in a relevant context.

194 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that a Hoxa3-Pax1 genetic pathway is required for both epithelial cell growth and differentiation throughout thymus and parathyroid organogenesis.

142 citations