Abstract

Abstract This study shows that the normal thymus produces immunoregulatory CD25+4+8− thymocytes capable of controlling self-reactive T cells. Transfer of thymocyte suspensions depleted of CD25+4+8− thymocytes, which constitute ∼5% of steroid-resistant mature CD4+8− thymocytes in normal naive mice, produces various autoimmune diseases in syngeneic athymic nude mice. These CD25+4+8− thymocytes are nonproliferative (anergic) to TCR stimulation in vitro, but potently suppress the proliferation of other CD4+8− or CD4−8+ thymocytes; breakage of their anergic state in vitro by high doses of IL-2 or anti-CD28 Ab simultaneously abrogates their suppressive activity; and transfer of such suppression-abrogated thymocyte suspensions produces autoimmune disease in nude mice. These immunoregulatory CD25+4+8− thymocytes/T cells are functionally distinct from activated CD25+4+ T cells derived from CD25−4+ thymocytes/T cells in that the latter scarcely exhibits suppressive activity in vitro, although both CD25+4+ populations express a similar profile of cell surface markers. Furthermore, the CD25+4+8− thymocytes appear to acquire their anergic and suppressive property through the thymic selection process, since TCR transgenic mice develop similar anergic/suppressive CD25+4+8− thymocytes and CD25+4+ T cells that predominantly express TCRs utilizing endogenous α-chains, but RAG-2-deficient TCR transgenic mice do not. These results taken together indicate that anergic/suppressive CD25+4+8− thymocytes and peripheral T cells in normal naive mice may constitute a common T cell lineage functionally and developmentally distinct from other T cells, and that production of this unique immunoregulatory T cell population can be another key function of the thymus in maintaining immunologic self-tolerance.

Keywords

IL-2 receptorThymocyteBiologyImmunologyT cellT-cell receptorCell biologyImmune system

MeSH Terms

AnimalsAutoimmune DiseasesCD28 AntigensCD4 AntigensCell DifferentiationCell DivisionCellsCulturedClonal AnergyDose-Response RelationshipImmunologicImmune SeraImmunityInnateImmunophenotypingInterleukin-2Lymphocyte ActivationLymphocyte DepletionMiceMiceInbred BALB CMiceKnockoutMiceNudeMiceTransgenicReceptorsAntigenT-CellReceptorsInterleukin-2Self ToleranceT-Lymphocyte SubsetsT-LymphocytesRegulatoryThymus Gland

Affiliated Institutions

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Publication Info

Year
1999
Type
article
Volume
162
Issue
9
Pages
5317-5326
Citations
1188
Access
Closed

Citation Metrics

1188
OpenAlex
41
Influential
905
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Cite This

Misako Itoh, Takeshi Takahashi, Noriko Sakaguchi et al. (1999). Thymus and Autoimmunity: Production of CD25+CD4+ Naturally Anergic and Suppressive T Cells as a Key Function of the Thymus in Maintaining Immunologic Self-Tolerance. The Journal of Immunology , 162 (9) , 5317-5326. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.162.9.5317

Identifiers

DOI
10.4049/jimmunol.162.9.5317
PMID
10228007

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%