Abstract

The thymus is the major site of mammalian T cell production. The exact steps which occur in the thymus and give rise to mature T cells have not been defined, but there is general agreement that the earliest T cells are included in the group of thymic lymphoid cells lacking Ly 2 (CD8) and L3T4 (CD4). This population represents 2–6% of adult thymocytes and the vast majority of thymocytes in the mouse embryo until about day 16 of gestation. It has often been assumed that the foetal and adult CD4 − CD8 − thymocytes are equivalent. This paper shows that there are significant differences between the CD4 − CD8 − cells from these sources, in that the adult includes at least two subsets which are undetectable in the embryo. These two subsets of CD4 − CD8 − cells are both Ly 1 high, B2A2 − and M1/69 −; one is Thy 1 + and one is Thy 1 −. Each represents 20–25% of adult CBA double negative thymocytes. Both these populations are excluded from analyses of CD4 − CD8 − thymocytes which have been further selected as Ly 1 low, a procedure adopted in several studies of early thymocytes. Even those subpopulations of CD4 − CD8 − cells which appear to express similar markers in adult and embryo thymus are quite different when analysed for cell size (forward light scatter), with the embryonic forms being much larger.

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