Abstract
A small but definite proportion of T-lymphocyte-like cells have been reported in nu/nu (nude) mouse spleen despite the congenital absence of a thymus in these animals. We have determined the number and the characteristics of such cells using flow cytometry. The level of T-like cells increased with age. In 4-month-old nu/nu CBA spleen, 14% of all cells expressed some Thy 1 antigen. However, only 4% expressed mature T-cell levels, and only the 2% with the highest Thy 1 also showed a normal distribution of Ly 1 and Ly 2 antigens. These T-like cells were slightly larger than normal nondividing T lymphocytes. We have assessed the total functional capacity of T-like cells in nu/nu CBA spleen using a high-cloning-efficiency limit-dilution culture system. Almost all precursor cells capable of forming clones when stimulated with concanavalin A in the presence of irradiated spleen cells and growth factors, and almost all precursors of those clones that were cytolytic in a lectin-mediated tumor-cell-lysis assay, were within this 2% subpopulation of nu/nu spleen cells with mature T-cell markers. Increased levels of purified interleukin 2 failed to induce further precursor function, indicating that maturation of pre-T cells was not obtained. However the nu/nu spleen cells bearing mature T-cell markers displayed only 10-30% of the cloning efficiency of normal splenic T cells. The majority of nu/nu spleen T-like cells, even within this phenotypically "normal" subset, appeared to be nonfunctional. We conclude that the absence of a thymus leads to qualitative, as well as quantitative, deficiencies in the T-cell population, and various interpretations are discussed.
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