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- Title
Absence of growth by most receptor-expressing fetal thymocytes in the presence of interleukin-2.
- Authors
von Boehmer, Harald; Crisanti, Andrea; Kisielow, Pawel; Haas, Werner
- Abstract
The growth of mature T cells is regulated by receptors for interleukin-2 (IL-2) and by IL-2 itself. Binding of antigen to T-cell antigen receptors induces the expression of IL-2 receptors, and binding of IL-2 to these receptors induces transferrin receptor expression and is sufficient to promote the growth of T cells for several days1,2. However, nothing is known about the growth requirements of pre-T cells. We have therefore studied the dividing population of T-cell precursors which carry the Thy-1 surface antigen, but lack surface antigens Ly2 and L3T4; these cells are present in 14-day-old embryonic thymus3,4. If the thymus is removed at this stage and placed in organ culture, all lymphocyte subpopulations normally present in thymuses of adult mice develop in vitro4,5, that is, the nonfunctional Ly2+, L3T4+ population and the functional Ly2+, L3T4− and Ly2−, L3T4+ populations4. We now report that, in contrast to their progeny, the early Ly2−, L3T4− cells express large amounts of IL-2 receptors, but most of them do not grow in IL-2-containing media outside the thymus. In contrast to dividing mature T cells, most fetal thymocytes express low amounts of transferrin receptors.
- Publication
Nature, 1985, Vol 314, Issue 6011, p539
- ISSN
0028-0836
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/314539a0