Abstract: | Four polypeptide fractions were isolated by high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) from culture supernatant of rat thymic epithelial cell line (IT-45R1). Biological activity of these fractions was examined according to the capacity inducing rosette-formation between rat thymocytes and guinea pig erythrocytes. A relatively rich population of non-rosette-forming cells (non-RFC), one of targets for thymic hormones, was separated from rat thymocytes by combining rosette-formation method with differential centrifugation. Non-RFC consists of outer-cortical and medullary thymocytes. Medullary thymocytes treated with the polypeptide fraction did not differentiate into RFC. Therefore, the cells, which rosette-forming capacity was induced, seem to derive from outer-cortical area. One of the polypeptide fractions (estimated molecular weight: 3 K) possessed the activity endowing non-RFC with rosette-forming capacity. Since its molecular weight was similar to that of thymosin alpha 1, the fraction was pretreated with anti-thymosin alpha 1 antiserum. The pretreatment suppressed the activity of the fraction. Thus, the fraction must contain thymosin alpha 1 or a polypeptide possessing an antigenic determinant similar to that of thymosin alpha 1. Moreover, two of four subfractions, which were divided from the active fractions by reversed-phase HPLC, showed the biological activity. |