Zinkernagel R M, Althage A, Callahan G
J Exp Med. 1979 Sep 19;150(3):693-7. doi: 10.1084/jem.150.3.693.
Thymus-derived lymphocytes (T cells) have two outstanding characteristics that distinguish them from other lymphocytes: (a) they express two specificities, one for self-antigens, the major transplantation antigens (H) coded by the major histocompatibility gene complex (MHC), and a second specificity for foreign antigenic determinants. (b) T cells must undergo differentiation or maturation in the thymus (1, 2). Apparently, an important step in T-cell differentiation in the thymus is the selection of T-cells' restriction specificity for self-H. This interpretation stems from experiments with chimeras formed by lethally irradiating parental type mice and reconstituting them with F(1) stem cells: the maturing F(1) T cells expressed predominantly the restriction specificities for the recipient parental MHC type (3-8). Alternatively, adult F(1) mice that were thymectomized, lethally irradiated, reconstituted with bone marrow, and then engrafted with a parental thymus had T cells that were restricted predominantly to the thymus donors' H-2 (4-8). The present study first extends these observations to nude mice that are born without a thymus and therefore do not develop functional T cells and second, attempts to study the possibility that suppression may be responsible for the apparent influence of the radioresistant portion of the thymus on T- cell restriction specificities. We tested the immunocompetence and restriction specificities expressed by lymphocytes from F(1) nude mice reconstituted with both parental thymus grafts; our expectation was that suppression of the expression of T-cell restriction specificity should result either in complete immunoincompetence or emergence of only one of the two possible sets of restriction specificities. Nude F(1)mice that simultaneously received thymus gratis from both parents developed spleen cells restricted to both parental H-2 types. These results are compatible with the idea that the thymus' influence on T- cell restriction is via positive selection rather than by suppression.
胸腺来源的淋巴细胞(T细胞)具有两个突出特征,使其有别于其他淋巴细胞:(a)它们表达两种特异性,一种针对自身抗原,即由主要组织相容性基因复合体(MHC)编码的主要移植抗原(H),另一种针对外来抗原决定簇。(b)T细胞必须在胸腺中经历分化或成熟过程(1,2)。显然,胸腺中T细胞分化的一个重要步骤是选择T细胞对自身H的限制特异性。这种解释源于对嵌合体的实验,即对亲代型小鼠进行致死性照射,并用F(1)干细胞进行重建:成熟的F(1)T细胞主要表达对受体亲代MHC类型的限制特异性(3 - 8)。或者,成年F(1)小鼠经胸腺切除、致死性照射、骨髓重建,然后植入亲代胸腺,其T细胞主要限制于胸腺供体的H - 2(4 - 8)。本研究首先将这些观察结果扩展到无胸腺出生因而无法发育功能性T细胞的裸鼠,其次,试图研究抑制作用是否可能是胸腺的放射抗性部分对T细胞限制特异性产生明显影响的原因。我们测试了用双亲胸腺移植重建的F(1)裸鼠淋巴细胞所表达的免疫能力和限制特异性;我们预期,T细胞限制特异性表达的抑制应导致完全免疫无能或仅出现两种可能的限制特异性中的一种。同时从双亲免费获得胸腺的裸F(1)小鼠产生了限制于双亲H - 2两种类型的脾细胞。这些结果与胸腺对T细胞限制的影响是通过阳性选择而非抑制作用这一观点相符。