The ontogeny of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase positive cells in the human fetus

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Abstract

The ontogeny of cells containing the enzyme terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT) in human fetal liver, bone marrow, and thymus has been studied using a highly specific antiserum to TdT together with monoclonal antiprecursor cell antibodies in double and triple marker immunofluorescence. TdT+ cells were first observed in fetal liver at 12 wk of gestation and accounted for 55% of the lymphoid-like cells isolated after Ficoll-Hypaque separation. TdT+ cells were first observed in the bone marrow 16 wk after gestation. Like TdT+ cells in normal infant bone marrow, the majority of TdT+ cells in fetal liver and bone marrow expressed both BA-1 and RFB-1 antigens. This suggests that fetal TdT+ cells include progenitors of the B lineage (BA-1+) and perhaps of thymocytes (RFB-1+). Nevertheless, TdT was not observed in fetal thymocytes until after 20 wk of gestation, although thymic blasts and the majority of thymocytes were strongly RFB-1+ from 12 wk of gestation. These results clearly show that fetal thymus is first populated by TdT-, RFB-1+, BA-1- cells, but does not exclude the fact that a second 'wave' of TdT+ prothymocytes, possibly bone marrow derived, also exists.

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Bodger, M. P., Janossy, G., Bollum, F. J., Burford, G. D., & Hoffbrand, A. V. (1983). The ontogeny of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase positive cells in the human fetus. Blood, 61(6), 1125–1131. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v61.6.1125.bloodjournal6161125

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