Literature DB >> 1083766

Cytodynamics in the thymus of young adult mice: a quantitative study on the loss of thymic blast cells and non-proliferative small thymocytes.

M H Claësson, N R Hartmann.   

Abstract

Cell proliferation and cell loss in the thymic blast cell population were studied in young adult mice by (1) stathmokinetic methods combined with an analysis of the PLMe-curve after a pulse 3H-TdR, and (2) nigrosin-dye exclusion combined with 3H-TdR-autoradiography. It was calculated that about 17 percent of the blast cells do not progress into mitosis within the period of an average cell cycle. The dye exclusion studies indicated a rate of blast cell death of about 2-5 percent/hr. The two methods of assessing blast cell loss (death) support each other very well. In spite of these findings scintillation countings on thymuses removed from 1 to 17 hr after 3H-TdR injection showed fairly constant levels of thymic radioactivity. This suggests a very extensive reutilization of 3H-labelled break-down products from dying blast cells. The very sparse labelling of pyknotic thymocytes strongly suggests that thymic blast cells do not become pyknotic. The rate of small thymocyte production and disappearance was studied by pulse and repeated 3H-TdR labelling techniques combined with dye exclusion studies and pyknotic counts. The data from the repeated labelling experiment were analysed by use of a model based on the assumption of first order kinetics of small viable, dead, and pyknotic thymocytes. The rate of cell production was estimated to 1-6 percent/hr whereas the rates of cell loss due to disintegration, i.e. supravital stainability and nuclear pyknosis, were calculated to 0-02 percent/hr and 0-0006 percent/hr respectively. Cell loss due to disintegration was less than 2 percent of the total loss of small thymocytes. It was concluded that pyknotic counts are a useless method of assessing the cell death in the population of thymic blast cells and small thymocytes. On the basis of a model for thymocyte proliferation, production and loss it is suggested that about 45 percent of the small viable thymocytes re-enter the generative cell pool, whereas about 55 percent disappear by emigration.

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Year:  1976        PMID: 1083766

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Tissue Kinet        ISSN: 0008-8730


  4 in total

1.  Quantitative study of regression and regeneration of the thymic cell population after X-irradiation in the newtPleurodeles waltlii Michah.

Authors:  Yehia Moustafa; Pierre Chibon
Journal:  Wilehm Roux Arch Dev Biol       Date:  1984-02

Review 2.  In vivo proliferation and differentiation of prothymocytes in the thymus.

Authors:  C Penit
Journal:  Immunol Res       Date:  1987       Impact factor: 2.829

3.  Macrophages phagocytose thymic lymphocytes with productively rearranged T cell receptor alpha and beta genes.

Authors:  K Inaba; M Inaba; T Kinashi; K Tashiro; M Witmer-Pack; M Crowley; G Kaplan; J Valinsky; N Romani; S Ikehara
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1988-12-01       Impact factor: 14.307

4.  The function of Ia+ dendritic cells and Ia- dendritic cell precursors in thymocyte mitogenesis to lectin and lectin plus interleukin 1.

Authors:  K Inaba; M D Witmer-Pack; M Inaba; S Muramatsu; R M Steinman
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1988-01-01       Impact factor: 14.307

  4 in total

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