Abstract

Cord blood lymphocytes (CBL) have been shown to be functionally immature compared with normal circulating adult lymphocytes (NAL). Differentiation of T cells is associated with changes in surface antigenic markers and in the pattern of purine degradative enzymes. Previous studies have demonstrated that thymosin fraction 5 (TMS-F5) and thymosin alpha 1 (TMS-alpha 1) can induce in vitro differentiation of murine T-cell precursors and human thymocytes. We have investigated the effects of TMS-F5 and TMS-alpha 1 on the pattern of the purine degradative enzymes adenosine deaminase, purine nucleoside phosphorylase, and ecto-5'-nucleotidase (5'NT) of CBL and on the phenotypic markers from the OKT series 3, 4, 8 and 11. Other than a significantly reduced level of 5'NT activity (P less than 0.001) and an elevated percentage of OKT4+ cells (P less than 0.01), CBL demonstrated the same immunological and biochemical patterns as NAL. Incubation of CBL with TMS-F5 (150 micrograms/ml) and TMS-alpha 1 (1 microgram/ml) for 40 h caused a significant rise in 5'NT level and decrease of cells positive for OKT4, resulting in a pattern characteristic of NAL. Thus TMS-F5 might induce the terminal differentiation of CBL, and TMS-alpha 1 seemed to be the active component.

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