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1.
Among Ag-inexperienced naive T cells, the CD1d-restricted NKT cell that uses invariant TCR-alpha-chain is the most widely studied cell capable of prompt IL-4 inducibility. We show in this study that thymus CD161-CD44lowCD4+CD8- T cells promptly produce IL-4 upon TCR stimulation, a response that displays biased Vbeta(2/7/8) and Valpha3.2 TCR usage. The association of Vbeta family bias and IL-4 inducibility in thymus CD161-CD44lowCD4+CD8- T cells is found for B6, B10, BALB/c, CBA, B10.A(4R), and ICR mouse strains. Despite reduced IL-4 inducibility, there is a similarly biased Vbeta(2/7/8) TCR usage by IL-4 inducibility+ spleen CD161-CD44lowCD4+CD8- T cells. Removal of alpha-galacotosylceramide/CD1d-binding cells from CD161-CD44lowCD4+CD8- thymocytes does not significantly affect their IL-4 inducibility. The development of thymus CD161-CD44lowCD4+CD8- T cells endowed with IL-4 inducibility and their associated use of Vbeta(2/7/8) are beta2-microglobulin-, CD1d-, and p59fyn-independent. Thymus CD161-CD44lowCD4+CD8- T cells produce low and no IFN-gamma inducibility in response to TCR stimulation and to IL-12 + IL-18, respectively, and they express diverse complementarity determining region 3 sequences for both TCR-alpha- and -beta-chains. Taken together, these results demonstrate the existence of a NKT cell distinct, TCR-repertoire diverse naive CD4+ T cell subset capable of prompt IL-4 inducibility. This subset has the potential to participate in immune response to a relatively large number of Ags. The more prevalent nature of this unique T cell subset in the thymus than the periphery implies roles it might play in intrathymic T cell development and may provide a framework upon which mechanisms of developmentally regulated IL-4 gene inducibility can be studied.  相似文献   

2.
Triggering of the CD3:TCR complex by optimal concentrations of anti-CD3, anti-TCR beta-chain, and allogeneic stimulator cells induced dramatically higher levels (fivefold for anti-CD3, greater than 10-fold for anti-TCR beta-chain, 84-fold for alloantigen) of IL-2 production in spleen CD4+8- T cells than their thymic counterparts, despite comparable levels of CD3 and TCR beta-chain expression. The nature of the reduced IL-2 production was examined by analysis of anti-CD3-induced IL-2 production at the single cell level. The frequency of IL-2-producing cells in spleen CD4+8- T cells (40.0%) was approximately threefold that of thymus CD4+8- T cells (14.5%). Furthermore, the average IL-2 levels among positive IL-2 producers was also approximately threefold higher in spleen CD4+8- T cells than their thymic counterparts. Adoptive transfer of purified Thy-1.2+ CD4+8- T cells into Thy-1.1-congenic hosts provided a physiologic and histocompatible system that enabled identification of transferred donor (Thy-1.2+) among a sea of host (Thy-1.2-) CD4+ T cells, whose immune function with respect to IL-2 inducibility was examined after isolation by electronic cell sorting. Donor CD4+ T cells thus isolated from host spleen shortly (1 day) after i.v. transfer of thymus CD4+8- T cells were similar to freshly isolated thymus CD4+8- T cells in that they both produced little IL-2 in response to anti-CD3. However, by day 3 post-transfer, IL-2 production by donor CD4+8- T cells had more than doubled and by day 8, they produced IL-2 levels comparable to those of host spleen CD4+8- T cells. A similar acquisition of high level IL-2 inducibility in thymus CD4+8- T cells upon i.v. transfer into Thy-1.1-congenic hosts was also observed using allogeneic cells as the stimulus of IL-2 production. When thymus CD4+8- T cells were intra-thymically transferred into Thy-1.1-congenic hosts, those donor cells that emigrated to the periphery became high IL-2 producers in a time-dependent manner, whereas those that remained inside the thymus showed no signs of up-regulation in IL-2 inducibility. Intrathymic transfer of CD4-8- thymocytes revealed that the most recent thymic emigrant CD4+8- T cells contained few IL-2-producing cells and were not functionally mature with respect to high level IL-2 inducibility.  相似文献   

3.
This study follows our previous investigation describing the production of four cytokines (IL-2, IL-4, IFN-gamma, and TNF-alpha) by subsets of thymocytes defined by the expression of CD3, 4, 8, and 25. Here we investigate in greater detail subpopulations of CD4-CD8- double negative (DN) thymocytes. First we divided immature CD25-CD4-CD8-CD3- (CD25- triple negative) (TN) thymocytes into CD44+ and CD44- subsets. The CD44+ population includes very immature precursor T cells and produced high titers of IL-2, TNF-alpha, and IFN-gamma upon activation with calcium ionophore and phorbol ester. In contrast, the CD44- subset of CD25- TN thymocytes did not produce any of the cytokines studied under similar activation conditions. This observation indicates that the latter subset, which differentiates spontaneously in vitro into CD4+CD8+, already resembles CD4+CD8+ thymocytes (which do not produce any of the tested cytokines). We also subdivided the more mature CD3+ DN thymocytes into TCR-alpha beta- and TCR-gamma delta-bearing subsets. These cells produced cytokines upon activation with solid phase anti-CD3 mAb. gamma delta TCR+ DN thymocytes produced IL-2, IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha, whereas alpha beta TCR+ DN thymocytes produced IL-4, IFN-gamma, and TNF-alpha but not IL-2. We then studied alpha beta TCR+ DN T cells isolated from the spleen and found a similar cytokine production profile. Furthermore, splenic alpha beta TCR+ DN cells showed a TCR V beta gene expression profile reminiscent of alpha beta TCR+ DN thymocytes (predominant use of V beta 8.2). These observations suggest that at least some alpha beta TCR+ DN splenocytes are derived from alpha beta TCR+ DN thymocytes and also raises the possibility that these cells may play a role in the development of Th2 responses through their production of IL-4.  相似文献   

4.
The source of IL-4 required for priming naive T cells into IL-4-secreting effectors has not been clearly identified. Here we show that upon TCR stimulation, thymus NK1-CD4+8- T cells produced IL-4, the magnitude of which was inversely correlated with age. This IL-4 production response by Th2-prone BALB/c mice was approximately 9-fold that of Th1-prone C57BL/10 mice. More than 90% of activated NK1-CD4+8- thymocytes did not use the invariant V alpha 14-J alpha 281 chain characteristic of typical CD1-restricted NK1+CD4+ T cells. Stat6-null NK1-CD4+8- thymocytes produced bioactive IL-4, with induction of IL-4 mRNA expression within 1 h of stimulation. Our results support the possibility that TCR repertoire-diverse conventional NK1-CD4+ T cells are a potential IL-4 source for directing naive T cells toward Th2/type 2 CD8+ T cell (Tc2) effector development.  相似文献   

5.
This study shows that the normal thymus produces immunoregulatory CD25+4+8- thymocytes capable of controlling self-reactive T cells. Transfer of thymocyte suspensions depleted of CD25+4+8- thymocytes, which constitute approximately 5% of steroid-resistant mature CD4+8- thymocytes in normal naive mice, produces various autoimmune diseases in syngeneic athymic nude mice. These CD25+4+8- thymocytes are nonproliferative (anergic) to TCR stimulation in vitro, but potently suppress the proliferation of other CD4+8- or CD4-8+ thymocytes; breakage of their anergic state in vitro by high doses of IL-2 or anti-CD28 Ab simultaneously abrogates their suppressive activity; and transfer of such suppression-abrogated thymocyte suspensions produces autoimmune disease in nude mice. These immunoregulatory CD25+4+8- thymocytes/T cells are functionally distinct from activated CD25+4+ T cells derived from CD25-4+ thymocytes/T cells in that the latter scarcely exhibits suppressive activity in vitro, although both CD25+4+ populations express a similar profile of cell surface markers. Furthermore, the CD25+4+8- thymocytes appear to acquire their anergic and suppressive property through the thymic selection process, since TCR transgenic mice develop similar anergic/suppressive CD25+4+8- thymocytes and CD25+4+ T cells that predominantly express TCRs utilizing endogenous alpha-chains, but RAG-2-deficient TCR transgenic mice do not. These results taken together indicate that anergic/suppressive CD25+4+8- thymocytes and peripheral T cells in normal naive mice may constitute a common T cell lineage functionally and developmentally distinct from other T cells, and that production of this unique immunoregulatory T cell population can be another key function of the thymus in maintaining immunologic self-tolerance.  相似文献   

6.
The T lymphocytes that accumulate in vast numbers in the lymphoid tissues of lpr/lpr (lpr) mice express a TCR-alpha beta that is polyclonally rearranged, and yet is devoid of surface CD4 or CD8 (CD4-8-) as well as CD2. lpr CD2- alpha beta + CD4-8- T cells exhibit an apparent block in signal transduction, in that when activated they produce little or no IL-2 and proliferate minimally in the absence of exogenous IL-2. In contrast to the predominant hyporesponsive alpha beta + CD4-8- T cells, we observe that a minor subset (1 to 2%) of lpr lymph node CD4-8- cells expresses a TCR-gamma delta and can proliferate upon activation with PMA and ionomycin in the absence of exogenous IL-2. Furthermore, these responsive gamma delta T cells express surface CD2. The functional and phenotypic distinctions of lpr gamma delta T cells led us to identify an analogous minor (4 to 10%) subset of alpha beta + CD4-8- cells in lpr thymus and lymph nodes that does express CD2. Similar to the gamma delta subset, these CD2+ alpha beta + CD4-8- cells are also capable of proliferation and IL-2 production. Thus the capacity for IL-2 production and proliferation by a small proportion of lpr CD4-8- T cells, either alpha beta + or gamma delta +, correlates with their expression of surface CD2. This correlation is supported by the observation that the lpr liver contains actively cycling alpha beta + CD4-8- lymphocytes that are strikingly enriched for CD2 expression. Consequently, unlike the vast proportion of abnormal lpr CD2- CD3+ CD4-8- cells, the CD2+ CD3+ CD4-8- T cells may not express the basic lpr defect, or else are not affected by its presence. These studies suggest that expression of the lpr abnormality may be restricted to a particular T cell lineage. This functional correlation with CD2 expression may be more broadly applicable to phenotypically similar subsets of normal thymocytes, and possibly peripheral tolerized T lymphocytes.  相似文献   

7.
The relationships between cell proliferation and cell differentiation during thymus ontogeny were studied by labeling DNA-synthesizing thymocytes with bromodeoxyuridine and staining with antibodies against CD4, CD8, J11d, phagocytic glycoprotein 1, TCR V beta 8 chain, Thy-1, and IL-2R surface proteins. The development of the thymus was discontinuous, with two well defined growth periods from 13 days to 18 days of fetal life and from 3 days to 6 days after birth, and more progressive growth from day 8 to 2 wk. Cell proliferation started on fetal day 12, 1 day after the arrival of hemopoietic stem cells in the third branchial pouch. These cells were phagocytic glycoprotein 1-positive but IL-2R and Thy-1 negative. Thus, cell proliferation preceded IL-2R expression. Until day 15, CD4-8- thymocytes expanded without differentiation. Then CD4-8+ and CD4+8+ cells appeared; this induction was proliferation dependent and occurred on cells which had already lost IL-2R, but just after maximum expression of this receptor. During several days, the thymus remained of constant size (around 10(7) cells) and behaved like the steady state thymus. On day 3 after birth, expansion started again and was correlated with an increase in CD4-8- proliferation index and IL-2R expression. At the same time, the thymic subset capable of expansion without differentiation was again, transiently, detectable. These results suggest that the inflow of precursor cells into the thymus is permanent but transiently increased at several times during ontogeny. Moreover, the behavior of fetal CD4-8- cells does not appear radically different from that of adult precursors, but the actual difference resides in the variation of the relative proportion of CD4-8- cells at different maturation stages, as revealed by striking variations of IL-2R expression by cycling cells.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Thymocyte cell suspensions, prepared from mice at different ages, were cultured in vitro with human rIL-2. This stimulation resulted in a cell population that contained almost 50% TCR-gamma delta-positive cells if thymocytes were taken from fetal day 17 until just after birth. Analysis of the variable (V gamma) region used by the TCR-gamma delta cells revealed that 90% of them expressed TCR-V gamma 3, and less than 5% expressed TCR-V gamma 2. Cells positive for TCR-alpha beta were barely detectable. If fetal day 18 organ cultured thymus lobes, instead of a cell suspension, were stimulated with IL-2, no rise in the number of TCR-V gamma 3+ or TCR-delta+ cells was observed, whereas a partial outgrowth of TCR-alpha beta+ cells occurred. From day 1 after birth, the number of TCR-gamma delta cells recovered from an IL-2-stimulated thymocyte cell suspension dropped to reach a plateau of 15% of the total cell number, whereas TCR-V gamma 3+ cells became undetectable in older animals. TCR-alpha beta+ cells, on the other hand, quickly rose in cell number after birth. Kinetic analysis showed that the preferential outgrowth of TCR-V gamma 3+ cells in IL-2-stimulated fetal day 18 thymocyte cell suspensions was present from the onset of the culture; a significant proliferation of CD4 or CD8 single positive TCR-alpha beta cells was never observed. This lack of proliferation of TCR-alpha beta cells was not due to inhibition by the activated TCR-V gamma 3+ cells. Throughout the IL-2 culture, one-fourth of the TCR-V gamma 3+ thymocytes was positive for CD8. Analysis of the DNA content and the IL-2 receptor (IL-2R) p55 expression showed that during the first days of culture the TCR-V gamma 3+ cells had a much higher proliferation rate than the TCR-V gamma 3- cells, although TCR-V gamma 3+ IL2R p55+ cells could not be detected. From day 3 to 4 of culture, the proliferation rate of TCR-V gamma 3+ cells equaled that of the rest of the cells and less than 20% of the TCR-V gamma 3+ cells expressed the IL-2R p55. The biologic significance of our findings is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
In addition to TCR-derived signals, costimulatory signals derived from stimulation of the CD28 molecule by its natural ligand, B7, have been shown to be required for CD4+8- T cell activation. We investigate the ability of B7 to provide costimulatory signals necessary to drive proliferation and differentiation of virgin CD4-8+ T-cells that express a transgenic TCR specific for the male (H-Y) Ag presented by H-2Db class I MHC molecules. Virgin male-specific CD4-8+ T cells can be activated either with B7 transfected chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells and T3.70, a mAb specific for the transgenic TCR-alpha chain that is associated with male-reactivity, or by male dendritic cells (DC). Activated CD4-8+ T cells proliferated in the absence of exogenously added IL-2. IL-2 activity was detected in supernatants of CD4-8+T3.70+ cells that were stimulated with T3.70 and B7+CHO cells. The response of CD4-8+T3.70+ cells to T3.70/B7+CHO or to male DC stimulation were inhibited by CTLA4Ig, a fusion protein comprising the extracellular portion of CTLA4 and human IgG C gamma 1. It has been previously shown that CTLA4Ig binds B7 with high affinity. Staining with CTLA4Ig revealed that DC express about 50 times more B7 than CD4-8+ T cells. CTLA4Ig also specifically blocked the proliferation of male-reactive cells in vivo. We have also used an in vitro deletion assay whereby immature CD4+8+ thymocytes expressing the transgenic male-specific TCR are deleted by overnight incubation with either immobilized T3.70 or male DC to investigate the participation of the CD28/B7 pathway in the negative selection of immature thymocytes. Staining with B7Ig established that both immature murine CD4+8+ and mature CD4-8+ thymocytes express a high level of CD28. However, despite the high expression of CD28 on CD4+8+ thymocytes, it was found that deletion of CD4+8+ thymocytes expressing the male-specific TCR by the T3.70 mAb was not inhibited by B7+CHO cells. Furthermore, the deletion of these thymocytes by DC also was not inhibited by CTLA4Ig. These findings provide evidence that although signaling through CD28 can costimulate a primary anti-male response in mature CD4-8+ T cells, the CD28/B7 pathway does not appear to participate in the negative selection of immature CD4+8+ thymocytes.  相似文献   

11.
Within the thymus, developing T cells must acquire the competence to respond to appropriate signals by inducing the expression of genes required for immunologic function; one such gene encodes the 55-kDa-chain of the IL-2R (IL-2R alpha). Previously, we showed that most cortical-type thymocytes lack the competence to make this particular response, while most medullary-type cells respond like mature T lymphocytes. The noninducibility of cortical-type cells was striking, because most of their presumed precursors were inducible. To test the relationship between this apparent loss of competence and the positive and negative selection processes that may occur in the thymic cortex, we have assayed the inducibility of thymocyte populations, staged carefully with respect to their expression of TCR. Using size fractionation to enrich for dividing cells, we concentrated and thereby revealed defined developmental intermediates. We report that, although CD4+CD8- thymocytes behave as mature T cells, a significant fraction of CD4-CD8+ cells are noninducible. These noninducible thymocytes are dividing cells, which appear to be in a major developmental continuum between CD4-CD8- blasts and CD4+CD8+ blasts. Furthermore, the noninducible blasts as yet lack surface TCR expression. We also demonstrate the functional similarity of these CD4-CD8+ cells to a major subset of dividing CD4-CD8- precursor cells, which appear to have lost IL-2R alpha expression. These results suggest that precursors of cortical thymocytes lose competence to be induced to express IL-2R alpha several stages before their acquisition of cell-surface TCR complexes. The implications of this characterization are discussed in terms of the possible relationships between IL-2R alpha gene regulation and intrathymic fate determination.  相似文献   

12.
It is unclear which growth factors, if any, are involved in the growth and differentiation of immature T cells in the thymus. Because IL-1 has been previously implicated in thymocyte proliferation, we examined the effects of IL-1 on precursor thymocytes, the CD4-CD8- or double-negative (DN) cells. We show that IL-1 (together with Con A) is a growth factor for DN, TCR- alpha beta-cells in vitro. After 5 days of culture in IL-1 and Con A, a number of phenotypic changes were observed and two subsets of DN cells were distinguished. One subset expressed full length TCR-alpha and -beta mRNA and surface alpha beta TCR, the other expressed low levels of full length TCR-gamma together with high levels of full length TCR-delta mRNA. Thus, DN cells are induced by IL-1 and Con A to proliferate and express TCR without parallel acquisition of CD4 or CD8 markers. These data suggest that IL-1 drives early steps of intrathymic T cell differentiation.  相似文献   

13.
We have characterized CD4-CD8- double negative (DN) thymocytes that express TCR-alpha beta and represent a minor thymocyte subpopulation expressing a markedly skewed TCR repertoire. We found that DN TCR-alpha beta + thymocytes resemble mature T cells in that they (a) are phenotypically CD2hiCD5hiQa2+HSA-, (b) appear late in ontogeny, and (c) are susceptible to cyclosporin A-induced maturation arrest. In addition, we found that DNA sequences 5' to the CD8 alpha gene were demethylated relative to their germline state, suggesting that DN TCR-alpha beta + thymocytes are derived from cells that had at one time expressed their CD8 alpha gene locus. Because DN TCR-alpha beta + thymocytes are known to express an unusual TCR repertoire with significant overexpression of V beta 8, we were interested in examining the possible role played by self-Ag in shaping their TCR repertoire. It has been suggested that DN TCR-alpha beta + thymocytes are derived from potentially self-reactive thymocytes that have escaped clonal deletion by down-regulating their surface expression of CD4 and/or CD8 determinants. However, apparently inconsistent with such an hypothesis, we found that the frequency of DN thymocytes expressing various anti-self TCR (V beta 6, V beta 8.1, V beta 11, V beta 17a) were not increased in strains expressing their putative self-Ag, but instead were either unaffected or significantly reduced in those strains. With regard to V beta 8 expression among DN TCR-alpha beta + thymocytes, V beta 8 overexpression in DN TCR-alpha beta + thymocytes appeared to be independent of, and superimposed on, the developmental appearance of the basic DN thymocyte repertoire. Even though V beta 8 overexpression appeared to be generated by a mechanism distinct from that generating the rest of the DN TCR-alpha beta + thymocyte repertoire, we found that super-Ag against which V beta 8 TCR react introduced into the neonatal differentiation environment also significantly reduced, rather than increased, the frequency of DN TCR-alpha beta + V beta 8+ thymocytes. Thus, the present study is consistent with DN TCR-alpha beta + thymocytes being mature cells derived from CD8+ precursors, and documents that their TCR repertoire can be influenced, at least negatively, by either self-Ag or Ag introduced into the neonatal differentiation environment. However, we found no evidence to support the hypothesis that DN TCR-alpha beta + thymocytes are enriched in cells expressing TCR reactive against self-Ag.  相似文献   

14.
Lymphocytes from the human (h) IL-2R alpha chain transgenic mice (TGM) constitutively express high affinity binding sites for hIL-2, consisting of transgenic h-IL-2R alpha and endogenous murine IL-2R beta, and therefore easily proliferate in vitro in response to hIL-2. Our study was undertaken to clarify the hIL-2-responsive lymphocyte subsets in the TGM, which should most likely reflect the normal distribution of m IL-2R beta expression. In both thymus and spleen, the majority of expanded cells by hIL-2 was CD3+CD4-CD8+ TCR alpha beta+ cells. The proliferation of CD4+ cells was not observed at all from either organ despite the expression of transgenic hIL-2R alpha. Potent cellular proliferation was also observed from the thymocytes that had been depleted of CD8+ cells, the expanded cells consisting of CD3- (15-40%) and CD3+ populations (60-85%). Among CD3+ cells, approximately the half portion expressed TCR alpha beta, whereas the other half was suggested to express TCR gamma delta. A variable portion (5-20%) of the CD3+ cells expressed CD8 (Lyt-2) in the absence of Lyt-3, and the CD3+CD8+ cells were confined preferentially to the TCR alpha beta- (TCR gamma delta+) population. In the culture of splenocytes depleted of CD8+ cells, however, the proliferated cells were mostly CD3-CD4-CD8-TCR-Mac1-, whereas a minor portion (10-30%) was CD3+CD4-CD8-TCR alpha beta- (TCR gamma delta+. Analysis of TCR genes at both DNA and mRNA levels confirmed the phenotypical observations. These results strongly suggested that IL-2R beta was constitutively and selectively expressed on the primary murine thymocytes and splenic T and NK cells, except for CD4+ cells in both organs.  相似文献   

15.
The expression of the TCR/CD3 complex and the IL-2R alpha chain (p55) on fetal thymocytes has been analyzed by flow cytometry (FCM). Two-parameter immunofluorescence identified three subpopulations which were respectively IL-2R alpha-/CD3+, IL-2R alpha+/CD3-, or IL-2R alpha-/CD3-; no detectable population of IL-2R alpha+/CD3+ cells was found in unstimulated fetal thymocytes. Fractionation by "panning" and by sterile flow cytometric separation was used to characterize the functional responsiveness of these three subpopulations to a variety of stimuli. All three populations proliferated in response to PMA + ionomycin + rIL-2. In contrast, stimulation with anti-CD3 + IL-2 induced proliferation in IL-2R alpha-/CD3+ and IL-2R alpha-/CD3- but not in IL-2R alpha+/CD3- thymocytes. IL-2R alpha- cells, including sorted IL-2R alpha-/CD3- thymocytes, underwent a phenotypic change in response to in vitro stimulation with anti-CD3 + IL-2, resulting in the appearance of an IL-2R alpha+/CD3+ population that was not detected in freshly isolated thymocytes. The ability of fractionated fetal thymocytes to produce lymphokine in response to PMA + ionomycin was also evaluated. Only the IL-2R alpha-/CD3- fraction generated detectable IL-2. These findings demonstrate for the first time that CD3 and IL-2R alpha are expressed in a mutually exclusive fashion in fetal thymocytes and define three subpopulations of thymocytes that differ significantly in their proliferative and differentiative responses to TCR-mediated, IL-2R-mediated, and pharmacologic stimulation.  相似文献   

16.
The T cell antigen receptor (TCR)-associated invariable membrane proteins (CD3-gamma, -delta, -epsilon and -zeta) are critical to the assembly and cell surface expression of the TCR/CD3 complex and to signal transduction upon engagement of TCR with antigen. Disruption of the CD3-zeta gene by homologous recombination resulted in a structurally abnormal thymus which primarily contained CD4- CD8- and TCR/CD3very lowCD4+CD8+ cells. Spleen and lymph nodes of CD3-zeta-/- mutant mice contained a normal number and ratio of CD4+ and CD8+ single positive cells that were TCR/CD3very low. These splenocytes did not respond to antibody cross-linking or mitogenic triggering. The V beta genes of CD4-CD8- and CD4+CD8+ thymocytes and splenic T cells were productively rearranged. These data demonstrated that (i) in the absence of the CD3-zeta chain, the CD4- CD8- thymocytes could differentiate to CD4+CD8+ TCR/CD3very low thymocytes, (ii) that thymic selection might have occurred, (iii) but that the transition to CD4+CD8- and CD4-CD8+ cells took place at a very low rate. Most strikingly, intraepithelial lymphocytes (IELs) isolated from the small intestine or the colon expressed normal levels of TCR/CD3 complexes on their surface which contained Fc epsilon RI gamma homodimers. In contrast to CD3-zeta containing IELs, these cells failed to proliferate after triggering with antibody cross-linking or mitogen. In comparison to thymus-derived peripheral T cells in the spleen and lymph nodes, the preferential expression of normal levels of TCR/CD3 in intestinal IELs suggested they mature via an independent extrathymic pathway.  相似文献   

17.
T cell activation requires Ag-specific stimulation mediated by the TCR as well as an additional stimulus provided by Ag presenting cells. On human T cells, it has been shown that antibodies to the Ag CD28 can provide a potent amplification signal for cytokine production and proliferation. Here we describe the production of a mAb to the murine homologue of CD28, and the use of this antibody to examine the function and distribution of CD28 in the mouse. Anti-murine CD28 synergizes with TCR-mediated signals to greatly enhance lymphokine production and proliferation of T cells, and the CD28 signal is not blocked by cyclosporin A. In the peripheral lymphoid organs and in the blood of the mouse, all CD4+ and CD8+ T cells express CD28. In the thymus, CD28 expression is highest on immature CD3-, CD8+ and CD4+8+ cells, and on CD4-8- cells that express alpha beta and tau delta TCR. The level of CD28 on mature CD4+ and CD8+ alpha beta TCR+ thymocytes is two- to fourfold lower than on the immature cells. The potent costimulatory function of CD28 on mature T cells, together with the high level of expression on CD4+8+ thymocytes, suggest that this costimulatory receptor might play an important role in T cell development and activation.  相似文献   

18.
mAb directed against the TCR/CD3 complex activate resting T cells. However, TCR/CD3 signaling induces death by apoptosis in immature (CD4+CD8+) murine thymocytes and certain transformed leukemic T cell lines. Here we show that anti-TCR and anti-CD3 mAb induce growth arrest of cloned TCR-gamma delta + T cells in the presence of IL-2. In the absence of exogenous IL-2, however, the very same anti-TCR/CD3 mAb stimulated gamma delta (+)-clones to proliferation and IL-2 production. In the presence of exogenous IL-2, anti-TCR/CD3 mAb induced the degradation of DNA into oligosomal bands of approximately 200 bp length in cloned gamma delta + T cells. This pattern of DNA fragmentation is characteristic for the programmed cell death termed apoptosis. These results demonstrate that TCR/CD3 signaling can induce cell death in cloned gamma delta + T cells. In addition, this report is the first to show that apoptosis triggered by TCR/CD3 signaling is not restricted to CD4+CD8+ immature thymocytes and transformed leukemic T cell lines but can be also observed with IL-2-dependent normal (i.e., TCR-gamma delta +) T cells.  相似文献   

19.
Thymic stromal cell clone, TNC-R3.1 cell, was established from spontaneous AKR/J mouse thymoma. TNC-R3.1 cell, which has the similar properties to thymic nurse cells, formed a unique complex with normal thymocyte subpopulations. Flow cytometry analysis demonstrated that CD4+8+ and CD4-8- immature thymocytes preferentially interacted with TNC-R3.1 stromal cell clone. CD4+8+ thymocytes, which interacted with TNC-R3.1 stromal cell clone, contained a higher proportion of large size and cycling T cells than did noninteracting CD4+8+ thymocytes. As is generally accepted, CD4+8+ thymocytes did not respond to any stimulation such as IL-2, anti-CD3 mAb (2C11), or IL-2 plus 2C11. However, culture of isolated CD4+8+ thymocytes on TNC-R3.1 stromal cell monolayer in the presence of suboptimal dose of IL-2 induced a significant cell growth. Moreover, the addition of 2C11 and IL-2 into this coculture system resulted in a dramatic increase of the proliferative response of thymocytes. Flow cytometry analysis showed the proliferating cells on TNC-R3.1, which originated from CD4+8+ thymocytes, were mostly TCR-alpha beta+ CD3+CD4-8+ T cells. These results provide in vitro evidence that CD4+8+ thymocytes are at an intermediate stage of T cell maturation and TNC-R3.1 stromal cell clone induces the growth and differentiation of CD4+8+ thymocytes into CD4-8+ T cells.  相似文献   

20.
Developmental regulation of the intrathymic T cell precursor population   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The maturation potential of CD4-8- thymocytes purified from mice of different developmental ages was examined in vivo after intrathymic injection. As previously reported, 14-day fetal CD4-8- thymocytes produced fewer CD4+ than CD8+ progeny in peripheral lymphoid tissues, resulting in a CD4+:CD8+ ratio of less than or equal to 1.0. In contrast, adult CD4-8- thymocytes generated CD4+ or CD8+ peripheral progeny in the proportions found in the normal adult animal (CD4+:CD8+ = 2 to 3). Here we have shown that CD4-8- precursor cells from the 17-day fetal thymus also produced peripheral lymphocytes with low CD4+:CD8+ ratios. Precursors from full term fetuses produced slightly higher CD4+:CD8+ ratios (1.1-1.6) and precursors from animals three to 4 days post-birth achieved CD4+:CD8+ ratios intermediate between those produced by fetal and adult CD4-8- thymocytes. Parallel changes in the production of alpha beta TCR+ peripheral progeny were observed. Fetal CD4-8- thymocytes generated fewer alpha beta TCR+ progeny than did adult CD4-8- thymocytes. However, peripheral lymphocytes arising from either fetal or adult thymic precursors showed similar proportions of gamma delta TCR+ cells. The same pattern of progeny was observed when fetal CD4-8- thymocytes matured in an adult or in a fetal thymic stromal environment. In contrast to fetal thymic precursors, fetal liver T cell precursors resembled adult CD4-8- thymocytes by all parameters measured. These results suggest that fetal thymic precursors are intrinsically different from both adult CD4-8- thymocytes and fetal liver T cell precursors. Moreover, they lead to the hypothesis that the composition of the peripheral T cell compartment is developmentally regulated by the types of precursors found in the thymus. A model is proposed in which migration of adult-like precursors from the fetal liver to the thymus approximately at birth triggers a transition from the fetal to the adult stages of intrathymic T cell differentiation.  相似文献   

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