Influence of age on the proliferation and peripheralization of thymic T cells.

K Hirokawa, M Utsuyama, Y Katsura… - Archives of pathology & …, 1988 - europepmc.org
K Hirokawa, M Utsuyama, Y Katsura, T Sado
Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine, 1988europepmc.org
Bone marrow cells obtained from B10. Thy-1.1 mice (H-2b, Thy-1.1) were injected directly
into the thymus of C57BL/6 mice (H-2b, Thy 1.2) of various ages. Thymocyte precursors in
the injected donor-bone marrow cells could proliferate in the thymic microenvironment in the
following manner: first, preferentially proliferating into the subcapsular cortex; and second,
spreading to the whole layer of the cortex, a portion of them gradually moving into the
medulla. The proliferation of donor-type thymocytes was most pronounced when intrathymic …
Bone marrow cells obtained from B10. Thy-1.1 mice (H-2b, Thy-1.1) were injected directly into the thymus of C57BL/6 mice (H-2b, Thy 1.2) of various ages. Thymocyte precursors in the injected donor-bone marrow cells could proliferate in the thymic microenvironment in the following manner: first, preferentially proliferating into the subcapsular cortex; and second, spreading to the whole layer of the cortex, a portion of them gradually moving into the medulla. The proliferation of donor-type thymocytes was most pronounced when intrathymic injection of bone marrow cells (ITB) was performed in newborn mice and especially prominent in week-old mice; it took approximately ten weeks for donor-type thymocytes to finish the whole course of proliferation, differentiation, and emigration to the periphery. When ITB was performed in mice 4 weeks of age and older, the proliferation of donor-type thymocytes was retarded at onset, less pronounced in magnitude, and disappeared earlier. Emigration of donor-type T cells from the thymus to the peripheral lymphoid tissues occurred most rapidly when ITB was performed in newborn mice, and these T cells continued to reside thereafter in the peripheral lymphoid tissues. However, when ITB was performed in mice 4 weeks of age and older, the number of emigrated T cells in the spleen decreased (about a tenth of that in newborn mice) and, moreover, these T cells resided only transiently in the spleen. It was suggested that T cells emigrating from the thymus of mice from newborn to 2 weeks of age are long-lived, whereas those from the thymus in mice 4 weeks of age and older are short-lived. However, when 4-week-old young adult mice were treated by irradiation or hydrocortisone, the thymic capacity was enhanced in terms of proliferation and peripheralization of thymocytes, and emigrated T cells became long-lived.
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