Differentiation of functionally active mouse T lymphocytes from functionally inactive bone marrow precursors. IV. Recovery of T-cell function from bone marrow precursors in a histo-incompatible environment. |
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Authors: | R M Gorczynski and S Macrae |
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Abstract: | Regeneration of T-cell activities in vivo or in vitro from mouse bone marrow precursors differentiating in the presence of an allogeneic thymus was investigated. The data indicated that T-depleted bone marrow cells fail to affect long-term reconstitution of allogeneic recipients unless a pool of rapidly maturing T-precursor cells is also removed (post-thymic pool). Animals reconstituted with pre-thymic bone marrow stem cells become stable chimaeras in which cells capable of generating an in vitro CML response to host antigens, as well as cells capable of suppressing that response, could be demonstrated. Similar data (CML directed against the H-2 antigens of the 'host' thymus feeder layer and cells capable of inhibiting that response) were obtained when pre-thymic bone marrow cells were grown in vitro on allogeneic thymus feeder cells. When cytotoxic T-lymphocyte precursor (CTLp) and helper (CTLh) cells were separately investigated, a restriction in their co-operation for an anti-host response was observed when precursor cells differentiated in an allogeneic environment. Only CTLp and CTLh differentiating in the presence of the same allogeneic thymus source (whether in vivo or in vitro) could co-operate to generate CTL directed to H-2 antigens of that thymus source. |
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