These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: Developmentally ordered appearance of thymocytes expressing different T-cell antigen receptors. Author: Havran WL, Allison JP. Journal: Nature; 1988 Sep 29; 335(6189):443-5. PubMed ID: 2458531. Abstract: The T-cell repertoire is elaborated by a still poorly understood process during which precursor cells arising in the bone marrow seed the thymus to provide a starting point for intrathymic differentiation and selection. The products of the process are cells which express antigen receptors composed of either alpha/beta or gamma/delta heterodimers in association with CD3. The finding that the appearance of T-cell antigen receptor gamma- and delta-gene rearrangements and transcripts precedes those of full-length beta- and alpha-transcripts during ontogeny indicates that the process is ordered, a conclusion supported by the fact that the appearance of thymocytes expressing CD3-associated gamma/delta heterodimers precedes the appearance of those bearing alpha/beta heterodimers. The recent demonstrations that within the gamma- and delta-loci there is ordered and sometimes transient rearrangement and expression of specific V delta and V gamma gene segments during ontogeny raised the possibility that qualitative changes in the capacity of the differentiative process to generate components of the T-cell armamentarium might occur. We have produced a monoclonal antibody that detects an epitope of the V gamma 3 gene product, a gene segment expressed only in the early fetal thymus. In this report we demonstrate that cells expressing V gamma 3 are present transiently at the earliest stages of thymocyte development, preceding the appearance of cells bearing other gamma/delta or alpha/beta receptors. In the adult mouse, V gamma 3 expression appears to be limited to Thy-1+ cells in the epidermis. These results suggest a profound programming and staging in elaboration of the components of the T-cell system during the early stages of thymocyte development in the embryo.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]