Abstract

The murine autosomal recessive gene, Ipr, induces a progressive lymphadenopathy and lupuslike autoimmune syndrome characterized by the accumulation of immature, dull Thy 1.2+, TCR+, L3T4-/Lyt 2- (double-negative, DN) T cells in peripheral lymphoid organs. Previous studies demonstrated that the thymic microenvironment is required for the generation of the abnormal, peripheral DN T cells, while a more recent report linked the Ipr gene defect with a failure of thymocytes to express a functional form of the Fas antigen, which mediates apoptosis. Thus, the Ipr gene defect apparently prevents Ipr thymocytes from responding to the ordered sequence of differentiation and proliferation signals involved in normal rhymocyte maturation and selection. We compared the responses of thymocytes from C57BL/6 +/+ (normal) and congenic C57BL/6 Ipr/Ipr (Ipr) mice to a thymic stromal cell product which down-regulates DNA synthesis in vitro. The results indicate that (a) thymic stromal cells from Ipr mice produce a factor that can down-regulate DNA synthesis as efficiently as that from normal mice, even at an age when massive lymphadenopathy is present, (b) mitogen-stimulated thymocytes of normal, but not Ipr, mice are sensitive to the inhibitory factor, (c) normal DN thymocytes are the cellular target of the inhibitory factor, which acts at some postmembrane receptor-ligand binding event during mitogen-stimulated proliferation, and (d) IL-4-dependent DN thymocyte proliferation seems to be the main target of the inhibitory factor.

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