Presence of Ti (WT31) negative T lymphocytes in normal blood and thymus

Abstract
The antigen receptor expressed on most T lymphocytes is a disulphide-linked heterodimer (Ti) that is composed of alpha-chain and beta-chain subunits. On the surface of human T lymphocytes, Ti is non-covalently associated with three invariant proteins, designated CD3-gamma, -delta, and -epsilon. It has been suggested that Ti is obligatory for CD3 expression. But a T leukaemia cell line, IL-2 (interleukin 2) dependent T-cell clones established from fetal blood and IL-2 dependent cell lines established from immunodeficiency patients with bare lymphocyte syndrome and ectodermal dysplasia syndrome have recently been shown to express CD3, but not Ti (detected due to monoclonal antibody WT31). These lymphocytes may express the product of the T-cell antigen receptor gamma (TCR-gamma) gene, rather than the alpha/beta heterodimer, in association with CD3. Preliminary studies suggested that T cells expressing CD3 but lacking Ti are present in low frequency in normal lymphoid tissues. Here we show that in normal blood and thymus CD3+, WT31-T cells express neither CD4 nor CD8. The low frequency (less than 0.2-0.9% of total thymocytes) of CD3+, WT31- cells in the thymus suggests that this population does not represent a major stage of thymic development and may be a distinct lineage of T cells.