Abstract
AbstractCells from fetal liver or fetal and adult bone marrow that are membrane (m)CD3 negative and have not rearranged TCR genes but express CD3 proteins in their cytoplasm are considered to be committed T-cell progenitors. Recent findings question whether CD3 is T-cell specific because fetal natural killer (NK) cells have been shown to express cCD3 delta and epsilon proteins. To further examine the relationship between T and NK cells, we generated mCD3-cCD3+ clones from fetal liver. Two stable clones, FL412 and FL508, isolated from different donors, were selected on the basis of absence of the NK cell marker CD56. These clones shared a common phenotype of CD7+CD2lowCD3-CD4-CD8-CD5-CD6- CD11b+CD16-CD56 -. Like fetal NK clones, these clones expressed cytoplasmic CD3 delta and epsilon transcripts and proteins. However, the clones exhibited no or very low levels of cytotoxic activity against K562, JY, or Daudi, which were lysed efficiently by fetal NK clones. TCR beta, gamma, and delta genes in these clones were in germline configuration. Furthermore, both FL412 and FL508 responded not only to interleukin-2 (IL-2), IL-4, or IL-7, but also to IL-3 with proliferation. These results suggest that FL412 and FL508 retained some characteristics of a putative T or NK precursor in the fetal liver and may be useful for analyses of this poorly defined cell type.
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