| Literature DB >> 2145167 |
W R Hein1, L Dudler, B Morris.
Abstract
The concentrations of different lymphocyte subsets in the blood of lambs which had been thymectomized (Tx) in utero between days 67-75 of fetal gestation were measured at birth and at various intervals during the first year of life. Compared to thymus-intact (Ti) controls, Tx lambs were severely depleted of both alpha/beta and gamma/delta T cells at birth (less than 10% of control levels). The majority of the residual alpha/beta T cells present in Tx lambs at birth were CD4+CD8-. As the Tx lambs aged, the concentration of alpha/beta T cells in blood increased steadily to reach levels around 50% of control values. In contrast, the circulating gamma/delta T cells did not expand in Tx animals and remained barely detectable throughout the observation period, although these cells accounted for 30%-60% of the T cells in the blood of Ti lambs. The expansion of alpha/beta but not gamma/delta T cells was also reflected in changes in the cellular composition of solid lymphoid organs in Tx lambs. B cell numbers were similar in both groups at birth but Tx lambs were persistently B lymphopenic from 3 weeks of age onwards. The alpha/beta T cells that had expanded in Tx lambs responded to stimulation with bacterial antigens in a way that was qualitatively similar to the response in Ti lambs. By contrast, the few gamma/delta T cells in Tx lambs responded abnormally. Our results show that although sheep alpha/beta and gamma/delta T cells are equally thymus dependent during ontogeny, the early fetal thymic emigrants which establish the two T cell lineages in the periphery have strikingly different antigen reactivities and capacities for self-renewal and expansion.Entities:
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Year: 1990 PMID: 2145167 DOI: 10.1002/eji.1830200827
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Immunol ISSN: 0014-2980 Impact factor: 5.532