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Thymic emigrants isolated by a new method possess unique phenotypic and functional properties

  1. Author:
    Lee, C. K.
    Kim, K.
    Welniak, L. A.
    Murphy, W. J.
    Muegge, K.
    Durum, S. K.
  2. Author Address

    NCI, Mol Immunoregulat Lab, Div Basic Sci, Sect Cytokines & Immun, Bldg 560 Room 31-71, Frederick, MD 21702 USA. NCI, Mol Immunoregulat Lab, Div Basic Sci, Sect Cytokines & Immun, Frederick, MD 21702 USA. Sci Applicat Int Corp, Intramural Res Support Program, Frederick, MD USA. Durum SK NCI, Mol Immunoregulat Lab, Div Basic Sci, Sect Cytokines & Immun, Bldg 560 Room 31-71, Frederick, MD 21702 USA.
    1. Year: 2001
  1. Journal: Blood
    1. 97
    2. 5
    3. Pages: 1360-1369
  2. Type of Article: Article
  1. Abstract:

    T cells that emigrate from the thymus have primarily been studied in vivo using fluorescent dye injection of the thymus. This study examined the properties of thymocytes that emigrate from cultured thymic lobes in organ culture. Under these conditions, thymic emigrants displayed the expected;phenotype, that of mature thymocytes expressing high levels of T-cell receptor (TCR-alpha beta) and either CD4 or CD8, and were observed to emigrate within 24 hours of positive selection. Emigration was inhibited by cytochalasin D, pertussis toxin, or Clostridium difficile toxin B, implicating an active motility process. Most of the surface markers on alpha beta -thymic emigrants (Thy1, CD44, CD69, CD25, leukocyte functional antigen-1, intercellular adhesion molecule-1, alpha (4)- integrin, alpha (5)- integrin, CD45, and CD28) were expressed at a surface density similar to that on mature intrathymic cells and peripheral splenic T cells. Heterogeneous expression of L-selectin and heat stable antigen (HSA) suggested that subsets emerge from the thymus with a commitment to different migration patterns. The only marker on emigrants not found on either intrathymic cells or mature spleen T cells was CTLA-4, which could dampen the response of emigrants to peripheral antigens. Antigen responsiveness measured in vitro against allogeneic dendritic cells showed a proliferative response comparable to that of splenic T cells. In vivo, however, thymic emigrants failed to induce an acute graft-versus-host reaction in allogeneic severe combined immunodeficiency recipients. This suggests that a mechanism operating in vivo, perhaps tolerance or migration pattern, attenuates the response of emigrants against antigens that did not induce their deletion in the thymus. (Blood, 2001;97:1360-1369) (C) 2001 by The American Society of Hematology.

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