Nature, Vol.373, No.6515, 620-623, 1995
Selective Requirement for Map Kinase Activation in Thymocyte Differentiation
ENGAGEMENT of the T-cell receptor (TCR) with cognate ligands provokes different outcomes depending on the developmental stage of the T cell and on the properties of the ligand. In immature thymocytes TCR stimulation may result in maturation (positive selection) or death (negative selection), whereas in mature T cells it may induce proliferation, death or unresponsiveness(1-5). To investigate the different signals involved in these processes, we have analysed the role of the MAP kinase (MAPK) cascade, which is required for growth-factor-stimulated replication and for differentiation in other cell types(6-9), by expressing a catalytically inactive form of MAPK kinase (MEK-1) in thymocytes, thereby blocking MAPK activation, We find that positive selection of these cells is inhibited but that negative selection and TCR-induced proliferation are unaffected. Our results indicate that the intracellular signals regulating lineage commitment in T cells parallel those in photoreceptor cell specification in Drosophila(10) and vulval cell differentiation in Caenorhabditis elegans(11), suggesting that general rules for cell-type specification could apply among all metazoans.