Abstract

A population of murine spleen cells, enriched by flotation in discontinuous bovine serum albumin gradients, was induced to differentiate in vitro by incubation with the purified thymic polypeptide hormone thymopoietin. These cells, normally unresponsive to both T and B cell mitogens, acquired the capacity to respond to the T cell mitogens concanavalin A (Con A) and phytohemagglutinin (PHA) but remained unresponsive to the B cell mitogen lipopolysaccharide from Escherichia coli. The acquisition of responsiveness to mitogens was not impaired by treatment with anti-Thy-1 serum + complement before induction but was prevented by this treatment after induction; thus the cells acquiring the functional capacity to respond to T cell mitogens had also been induced to express the T cell alloantigen Thy-1. Like the expression of T cell alloantigens, the capacity to respond to Con A developed rapidly and reached its maximum within 6 hr. Responses to Con A always greatly exceeded those to PHA. Our data suggest that committed precursor cells, which we believe to be prothymocytes, are induced by thymopoietin to differentiate to cells with an antigenic phenotype and mitogen responsiveness similar to cortical thymocytes.

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