The thymus in "bare lymphocyte" syndrome : Significance of expression of major histocompatibility complex antigens on thymic epithelial cells in intrathymic T-cell maturation
Publication date
1985
Authors
Schuurman, Henk-Jan
Wijngaert, Frank P. van de
Huber, Jonne
Schuurman, R.K.B.
Zegers, Ben J.M.
Roord, John J.
Kater, L.
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Article
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Abstract
Thymic biopsies from two patients with combined immunodeficiency and defective expression of HLA class I and class II antigens on blood mononuclear cells (“bare lymphocyte” syndrome) were investigated. This made possible an evaluation of the significance of HLA antigen expression in a detailed (immuno)histologic study. Both thymuses showed a normal lobular architecture with distinct cortex-medulla areas, well-differentiated epithelium, including ultrastructurally defined subtypes, and Hassall's corpuscles. Normal numbers of lymphoid cells were present and normal T-cell phenotype was found. Using anti-HLA-A,B,C antisera, confluent staining of the medulla (stroma and lymphocytes) was observed. One of the thymuses was found to be negative for HLA class II antigen expression: the other revealed only HLA-DR positivity of nonlymphoid cells in the medulla. These cells were not of epithelial nature as judged from double staining with anti-keratin antibody. There was no expression of HLA-DC/DS. These observations differ from findings in the normal thymus, wherein epithelial cells in the cortex carry HLA class I and class II antigens, and epithelial cells in the medulla express HLA class I, and for a minor part class II antigens. The results indicate a normal sequential acquisition of T-cell differentiation antigens in the thymus of both cases. It is suggested that the expression of HLA class I and class II antigens on epithelial cells in the normal thymus cortex does not play a significant role in the sequential acquisition of differentiation antigens on T lymphocytes.