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pubmed-2186455
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pubmed-21864552008-04-17 Post-thymic T lymphocyte maturation during ontogenesis Articles Peripheral T lymphocytes from newborn (4-6-d-old) mice, isolated from the spleen or lymph nodes, show phenotypic features of immature cortical thymocytes, such as high frequencies of proliferating cells and of peanut lectin-binding cells. These are features of peripheral T cells of recent thymic origin, as shown by in situ labeling of thymocytes and subsequent observation of the migrants to the spleen, which were mainly peanut lectin-binding cells. The function of newborn peripheral T cells was compared, on a per T cell basis, with that of thymocytes and of fully mature peripheral T cells of the adult, using preparations of newborn lymph node cells containing approximately 80% of T lymphocytes. They were strikingly (about 10-fold) less competent than adult T cells in their phytohemagglutinin responsiveness, their capacities to induce a graft vs. host reaction, to proliferate in the mixed lymphocyte reaction, and to help B lymphocytes in a humoral response in vivo and in vitro. In contrast, newborn T lymphocytes were comparable to those of adults in their capacity to generate cytotoxic T lymphocytes. No suppressive effect of newborn T lymphocytes could be demonstrated in several of these assays. These results argue for an asynchronous maturation of two T cell subsets during ontogeny and demonstrate that at least some T lymphocytes leave the thymus as immature T cells resembling cortical thymocytes and further mature at the periphery. Investigation of mice submitted to thymectomy of 5 d of age showed that these incompetent post-thymic T lymphocytes are capable of considerable expansion and maturation in the peripheral lymphoid organs in the absence of a thymic influence. The Rockefeller University Press 1981-09-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2186455/ /pubmed/6115885 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
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repository_type |
Open Access Journal
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institution_category |
Foreign Institution
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institution |
US National Center for Biotechnology Information
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building |
NCBI PubMed
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collection |
Online Access
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language |
English
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format |
Online
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title |
Post-thymic T lymphocyte maturation during ontogenesis
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spellingShingle |
Post-thymic T lymphocyte maturation during ontogenesis
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title_short |
Post-thymic T lymphocyte maturation during ontogenesis
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title_full |
Post-thymic T lymphocyte maturation during ontogenesis
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title_fullStr |
Post-thymic T lymphocyte maturation during ontogenesis
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title_full_unstemmed |
Post-thymic T lymphocyte maturation during ontogenesis
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title_sort |
post-thymic t lymphocyte maturation during ontogenesis
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description |
Peripheral T lymphocytes from newborn (4-6-d-old) mice, isolated from the spleen or lymph nodes, show phenotypic features of immature cortical thymocytes, such as high frequencies of proliferating cells and of peanut lectin-binding cells. These are features of peripheral T cells of recent thymic origin, as shown by in situ labeling of thymocytes and subsequent observation of the migrants to the spleen, which were mainly peanut lectin-binding cells. The function of newborn peripheral T cells was compared, on a per T cell basis, with that of thymocytes and of fully mature peripheral T cells of the adult, using preparations of newborn lymph node cells containing approximately 80% of T lymphocytes. They were strikingly (about 10-fold) less competent than adult T cells in their phytohemagglutinin responsiveness, their capacities to induce a graft vs. host reaction, to proliferate in the mixed lymphocyte reaction, and to help B lymphocytes in a humoral response in vivo and in vitro. In contrast, newborn T lymphocytes were comparable to those of adults in their capacity to generate cytotoxic T lymphocytes. No suppressive effect of newborn T lymphocytes could be demonstrated in several of these assays. These results argue for an asynchronous maturation of two T cell subsets during ontogeny and demonstrate that at least some T lymphocytes leave the thymus as immature T cells resembling cortical thymocytes and further mature at the periphery. Investigation of mice submitted to thymectomy of 5 d of age showed that these incompetent post-thymic T lymphocytes are capable of considerable expansion and maturation in the peripheral lymphoid organs in the absence of a thymic influence.
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publisher |
The Rockefeller University Press
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publishDate |
1981
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url |
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2186455/
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_version_ |
1611427159363026944
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