| Literature DB >> 2230642 |
L A Jones1, L T Chin, G R Merriam, L M Nelson, A M Kruisbeck.
Abstract
Self-tolerance is achieved in part through intrathymic deletion of self-reactive T cells. The necessity of the thymus for this process is suggested by the development of autoimmune diseases in neonatally thymectomized (neoTx) mice and by the failure of clonal deletion in nude mice. Indeed, the present study demonstrates that neonatal thymectomy on day 3 after birth results in the failure of clonal deletion of V beta 11+ T cells in BALB/c mice and V beta 5+ and V beta 6+ T cells in DBA/2 mice. However, these potentially autoreactive cells are nonfunctional as measured by proliferation and lymphokine production after stimulation with appropriate anti-V beta mAbs or stimulator cells. It appears that this induction of nonresponsiveness may have occurred extrathymically: the early neonatal thymus (presumably the source of the peripheral T cells observed in neoTx mice) also contains T cells with self-reactive receptors, but these cells are fully functional. Therefore, neonatal thymectomy aborts deletion of self-reactive T cells, but self-tolerance is maintained through functional inactivation of potentially self-reactive clones.Entities:
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Year: 1990 PMID: 2230642 PMCID: PMC2188676 DOI: 10.1084/jem.172.5.1277
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Med ISSN: 0022-1007 Impact factor: 14.307