• 1 September 1973
    • journal article
    • Vol. 25 (3), 353-66
Abstract
Normal mouse serum confers on bone marrow rosette-forming cells (RFC) from normal mice a high sensitivity to anti-theta serum (AθS) and azathioprine (AZ) which they otherwise lack. Such an effect can also be demonstrated on spleen cells from adult thymectomized mice, `thymus-deprived' and nude mice, but the amount of serum required is higher in the latter mice. This activity of serum on RFC disappears after thymectomy of the serum donor with a half-life of 2.5 hours and reappears in thymectomized mice within 4 days after grafting of a thymus. Serum thymic activity (TA) is present in different amounts in different mouse strains and in ageing mice it progressively disappears. No TA is found in the serum of 4-week-old nude mice. TA is stable after lyophilization but is thermolabile in solution. It passes through UM 10 Amicon membranes, which suggests that its molecular weight (mol. wt) is probably < 10,000. TA is reversibly suppressed in the presence of a serum inhibitor with a mol. wt between 100,000 and 300,000. This inhibitor is not detectable in the serum of thymectomized mice unless the serum is incubated with TA containing serum for 60 minutes at 37°. The biological significance of TA is still a matter of speculation but its role in maturation or expansion of T-cells is suspected.