Functional properties of human thymoma lymphocytes: role of subcellular factors in blastic activation
- PMID: 6981722
Functional properties of human thymoma lymphocytes: role of subcellular factors in blastic activation
Abstract
The proliferative responses to phytohemagglutinin and the role of subcellular factors in the modulation of blastogenesis of thymoma lymphocytes from 5 thymoma patients were investigated. The addition of exogenous interleukin 1, a macrophage product, strongly augmented the blastic transformation of cultured thymocytes from both normal and neoplastic glands by influencing the production of interleukin 2 (IL-2) by a well-defined T-cell subset. The magnitudes of the blastic responses were ultimately modulated by the amount of IL-2 released in culture. The higher proliferative responses exhibited by thymocytes from thymoma were effectively sustained by a higher production of IL-2 in culture. In addition to having distinctive surface membrane receptors in common with normal thymocytes, thymoma lymphocytes were also under the influence of the same subcellular factors involved in T-cell blastic activation as thymocytes. These observations imply the presence of functionally distinct subpopulations in the thymoma lymphocyte component and add arguments in favor of their nonneoplastic nature.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Medical