A MONOCLONAL ANTIBODY RECOGNIZING HUMAN THY‐ 1: DISTRIBUTION ON HUMAN AND NON‐HUMAN PRIMATE HAEMATOPOIETIC CELLS

Abstract
A monoclonal antibody designated antibody 309 (Ab 390) with anti-human Thy-1 reactivity was prepared by the hybridoma technique from the splenocytes of BALB/c mice immunized with human fetal brain. This antibody was shown to have anti-human Thy-1 reactivity because; it precipitated a molecule with a MW of about 24,000 daltons; it had a pattern of reactivity similar to that of previously described anti-human Thy-1 antibodies; and purified human Thy-1 antigen specifically inhibited binding of Ab 390 to a known antigen-positive cell line. It was the intent of this study to investigate the distribution of Thy-1 on normal and malignant hematopoietic cells in humans and non-human primates. Ab 390 did not react with human peripheral blood leukocytes, bone marrow cells or splenocytes by immunofluorescence but did react with subcapsular and cortical fetal thymocytes by peroxidase-antiperoxidase immunohistology. A section of fetal spleen demonstrated staining of connective tissue and blood vessels and rare reactive lymphocytes. Adult spleen contained Thy-1-positive cells surrounding the white pulp and in the marginal zone, but single-cell suspensions of splenocytes did not react with Ab 390. Ab 390 was tested against a variety of fresh human leukemia cells and human cell lines and was shown to react with only the acute lymphoblastic leukemia T cell lines RPMI 8402 and HPB-MLT. Non-human primate studies revealed reactivity with a number of T cell lines from New World primates (cotton-topped and red-bellied marmosets) and peripheral blood granulocytes (owl monkey). Human Thy-1 may be a marker for early T lymphocytes in man, and its distribution on non-human primate T cell lines suggests the same for certain species of non-human primates. Not consistent with the distribution on human cells was the demonstration of Ab 390 reactivity with owl monkey granulocytes.