Lineage marker-negative lymphocyte precursors derived from embryonic stem cells in vitro differentiate into mature lymphocytes in vivo.
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We induced differentiation of mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells into lymphoid cells by culturing in methylcellulose, followed by the co-culture with a bone marrow stromal cell line ST2 in the presence of IL-7. These lymphoid cells expressed transcripts of the recombination activating genes, RAG-1 and RAG-2, as well as the C mu gene, although the lymphoid cells did not express surface antigens specific to T or B lymphocytes such as T200, CD4, CD8 and B220, or transcripts of B lymphocyte-specific genes such as lambda 5 and mb-1. D-J rearrangement was detectable in the lymphoid cells differentiated from ES cells in vitro and a sizeable number of both B and T lymphocytes were generated in vivo when the ES-derived lymphoid cells were transferred into RAG-2-deficient mice, which contain no B or T lymphocytes. The results indicate that in the in vitro co-culture system, ES cells give rise to immature lymphocyte precursors which have potentials to differentiate into both mature B and T lymphocytes in vivo. The ES-derived lineage marker-negative lymphocyte precursors would thus provide useful materials for studying early events of lymphopoiesis.