A. Heitger et al., Requirement of residual thymus to restore normal T-cell subsets after human allogeneic bone marrow transplantation, TRANSPLANT, 69(11), 2000, pp. 2366-2373
Background. To determine the effect of residual thymic activity in reconsti
tuting the T-cell system after T cell-depleting therapy, we monitored T-cel
l subsets of a unique thymectomized cancer patient in comparison to thymus-
bearing patients after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT).
Methods. T cells and T-cell subsets previously shown in murine studies to b
e regulated by the thymus were analyzed by FAGS from 6 to >48 months after
BMT, The investigation of thymus-bearing patients included 32 examinations
of 9 children and 14 adults. None of the investigated cases had severe graf
t-versus-host disease or severe infections when examined.
Results. In the thymectomized host, T-cell regeneration occurred by donor c
ell expansion and was characterized by two prominent features: (i) a persis
tent failure to regenerate naive (CD45RA(+)) T-helper cells (14%, median),
consistent with the recently developed concept of a thymus-dependency; and
(ii) persistently elevated proportions of CD3(+)CD4(-)CD8(-) cells (double-
negative cells, median 29%), which were identified in T cell receptor (TCR)
gamma delta(+) (22%, median of CD3(+) cells, 88% double negatives) but also
TCR alpha beta(+) T-cell populations (78%, median of CD3(+) cells, 17% dou
ble negatives). In thymus-bearing patients, 10 of 12 and 6 of 14 examinatio
ns of children and adults, respectively, performed later than 12 months aft
er BMT showed the proportion of CD4(+)CD45RA(+) cells appropriate for age (
>52% and >28% in children and adults, respectively). Elevated double-negati
ve cells (>10%) were found in only three patients, but none had elevated do
uble-negative cells with a TCR alpha beta(+) phenotype.
Conclusion. Residual thymic activity might, in addition to its well-establi
shed role for regenerating naive T-helper (CD4(+)CD45RA(+)) cells, control
the expansion of double-negative cells, A normal T-cell subset regeneration
in a proportion of thymus-bearing adult hosts indicates the potential of a
n effective residual thymic activity even beyond childhood.