Failure of rearranged TCR transgenes to prevent age-associated thymic involution. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • After puberty, the thymus undergoes a dramatic loss in volume, in weight and in the number of thymocytes, a phenomenon termed age-associated thymic involution. Recently, it was reported that age-associated thymic involution did not occur in mice expressing a rearranged transgenic (Tg) TCRalphabeta receptor. This finding implied that an age-associated defect in TCR rearrangement was the major, if not the only, cause for thymic involution. Here, we examined thymic involution in three other widely used MHC class I-restricted TCRalphabeta Tg mouse strains and compared it with that in non-Tg mice. In all three TCRalphabeta Tg strains, as in control mice, thymocyte numbers were reduced by approximately 90% between 2 and 24 mo of age. The presence or absence of the selecting MHC molecules did not alter this age-associated cell loss. Our results indicate that the expression of a rearranged TCR alone cannot, by itself, prevent thymic involution. Consequently, other presently unknown factors must also contribute to this phenomenon.

publication date

  • October 15, 1999

Research

keywords

  • Aging
  • Gene Rearrangement, alpha-Chain T-Cell Antigen Receptor
  • Gene Rearrangement, beta-Chain T-Cell Antigen Receptor
  • Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell, alpha-beta
  • Thymus Gland
  • Transgenes

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0344378207

PubMed ID

  • 10510364

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 163

issue

  • 8