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The Journal of Immunology, Vol 134, Issue 6 3632-3642, Copyright © 1985 by American Association of Immunologists


ARTICLES

Identification of early stages of T lymphocyte development in the thymus cortex and medulla

R Scollay and K Shortman

Thymocyte subpopulations with a phenotype suggesting they are early stages of T cell development in the adult mouse thymus were characterized and isolated by using multiparameter flow cytometry and sorting, in conjunction with selective killing with antibody and complement (C). The intrathymic localization of these subpopulations was assessed by dipping the thymus in fluorescent dyes to selectively label outer-cortical cells. The main phenotypic markers used were sensitivity to C-mediated lysis by the monoclonal antibody B2A2 (which spares most prothymocytes but kills most thymocytes), the expression of the T cell lineage specific markers Ly-2 and L3T4, and the levels of the common T cell antigens Ly-1 and Thy-1. A preliminary selection for cells lacking Ly-2 and L3T4, or resistant to B2A2 and C, produced a population of large cells, only 5% of all thymocytes and distinct from the typical cortical blast cells. This population of putative early thymocytes was itself heterogeneous, consisting of eight subpopulations separable by phenotype and intrathymic localization. One group of two subpopulations (B2A2-, Ly-1++, Thy-1+ and either Ly-2+ L3T4- or Ly-2- L3T4+) appeared to be of medullary location, and their phenotype suggested they could have been early members of the medullary lineages. Another group of two subpopulations (B2A2-, Ly-1++, Thy-1-, Ly-2-, L3T4- and B2A2-, Ly-1++, Thy-1+, Ly-2- L3T4-) did not show a clear localization pattern and may have represented cells in an earlier stage of transition to medullary phenotype and location. A quite different group of three subpopulations (B2A2++, Ly-1-, Thy-1-, Ly-2- L3T4-; B2A2++, Ly-1-, Thy-1+, Ly-2-, L3T4-; and B2A2++, Ly-1+, Thy-1++, Ly-2- L3T4-) was concentrated in the outer cortex and seemed to represent a series of stages of a cortical pathway, before the typical cortical blast cells. Finally, a very minor subset (0.2% of thymocytes), lacking all these markers, was concentrated in the outer cortex; this fifth group had the phenotype expected of the earliest intrathymic precursor cells. The results suggest that the separate developmental streams of cortical and medullary thymocytes may be traced back, via these minor early blast subpopulations, to common precursor cells in the outer cortex.


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