Crouse D A, Turpen J B, Sharp J G
Surv Immunol Res. 1985;4(2):120-34. doi: 10.1007/BF02918808.
In formulating this summary of our simon-pure knowledge of the structure/function relationships in the thymus, we decided that the time may have come to introduce a suitable dose of cynicism to balance the sometimes hopeless optimism of the past. Are the non-lymphoid cells of the thymus necessary for thymic function? Probably, but not to the extent or uniqueness that some authors including ourselves have previously claimed; T cells can probably differentiate in other tissues but may acquire their preference for MHC class II in the thymus. Mouse thymic lymphoid cell traffic and surface phenotype has recently been summarized pictorally by Scollay and Shortman [95]. Briefly stated, within the thymus, cells are hatched, matched and then dispatched. Minimally, the non-lymphoid cells act either as scenically varied obstacles along the way, nurseries for newborn T cells, or as tombstones for life's disenfranchized, effete and autoaggressive thymocytes. Hassall's corpuscles are morphological structures unique to the thymus, which are most useful to medical students for identification of this tissue. Their function remains one of life's great mysteries. Morphologically, they are suitable companions to the more recently described strange multicellular complexes of lymphocytes and epithelial cells which might be functionally important. The thymus of the much studied inbred, environmentally mollycoddled, laboratory mouse has been often and majestically described. It is probably typical for that of man and most mammals. It may, however, be unrepresentative of the thymus of stressed and parasitized wild animals. Diseases of the thymus generally can be categorized as not having enough thymus, having a neoplastic thymus or having a thymus which does not work properly. The bottom line in our knowledge of thymic nonlymphoid cells is that if you are born without them, you get sick and die; unless, of course, you are a nude mouse in Omaha, in which case you just freeze to death.
在总结我们对胸腺结构/功能关系的纯粹认知时,我们认为或许是时候引入适度的怀疑态度,以平衡过去有时过于乐观的情绪了。胸腺的非淋巴细胞对于胸腺功能来说是必需的吗?可能是,但并非像包括我们自己在内的一些作者之前所宣称的那样不可或缺;T细胞或许能够在其他组织中分化,但可能在胸腺中获得对II类主要组织相容性复合体的偏好。斯考利和肖特曼最近用图表总结了小鼠胸腺淋巴细胞的迁移和表面表型[95]。简而言之,在胸腺内,细胞孵化、筛选,然后被派送出去。至少,非淋巴细胞要么在这个过程中充当不同场景下的障碍,要么作为新生T细胞的“托儿所”,要么成为那些被剥夺生存权利、衰老且具有自身攻击性的胸腺细胞的“墓碑”。哈索尔小体是胸腺特有的形态结构,对医学生识别该组织非常有用。其功能仍然是生命中的一大谜团。从形态学上讲,它们与最近描述的由淋巴细胞和上皮细胞组成的奇怪多细胞复合体相得益彰,而这些复合体可能具有重要的功能。人们对经过大量研究的近交系、环境娇养的实验小鼠的胸腺进行了诸多详尽的描述。它可能代表了人类和大多数哺乳动物的胸腺。然而,它可能无法代表处于应激状态且感染寄生虫的野生动物的胸腺。胸腺疾病通常可分为胸腺发育不全、胸腺肿瘤或胸腺功能异常。我们对胸腺非淋巴细胞的认识归根结底是,如果你生来就没有它们,你就会生病并死亡;当然,除非你是奥马哈的一只裸鼠,那样的话你只会冻死。