In vitro thymic organ cultures were used to examine the effects of the sex hormones estradiol and dihydrotestosterone on thymocytes. In contrast with the marked loss of cortical thymocytes seen in vivo with these hormones, no effect was apparent in vitro even at concentrations up to 10(-6) M. The glucocorticoid dexamethasone caused severe depletion in vivo and in vitro. Thymic androgen and estrogen receptors were determined; in the newborn animals up to 2 wk of age, receptor levels were barely detectable. The possibility of indirect modulation of thymic function by steroids in vivo was investigated by culturing thymic lobes in media containing serum from animals treated with these hormones. Only sera from dexamethasone-injected animals caused changes in cell size, number, viability, or phenotype in the culture system. The mechanism for the previously reported effects of sex steroids on the neonatal thymus therefore remains to be elucidated.
Thymocytes from adrenalectomized BALB/c male mice were separated by peanut agglutination (PNA) into cortical, corticosensitive, PNA+ cells and larger, medullary, corticoresistant, PNA- cells; the extent of cross-contamination of PNA+ and PNA- cells, and vice versa, was checked by flow microfluorometry. Glucocorticoid receptor profiles were established with 3H-dexamethasone as probe; no differences in receptor affinity or cellular concentration, or in cytoplasmic and nuclear compartmentalization were seen between PNA+ and PNA- cells. On two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, PNA+ and PNA- thymocytes from oil-injected (control) adrenalectomized mice showed patterns of incorporation of 35S-methionine into protein that differed in at least 12 spots, as revealed by autoradiography. PNA+ and PNA- cells from mice treated with submaximal (6 micrograms/day) or near-maximal thymolytic doses of dexamethasone (20 micrograms/day) were also examined by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Both PNA+ and PNA- cells showed substantial, overlapping dexamethasone-induced changes in protein synthetic profiles.
The sex steroids dihydrotestosterone (DHT) and estradiol (E2), were found to deplete the same cortical population of thymocytes as the glucocorticoid dexamethasone (DM) in intact and in adrenalectomized, castrated mice. Although receptors for DM were demonstrated in this cortical population, none were found for E2 or DHT. We suggest that the sex steroids bind to other thymic elements, possibly thymic reticular epithelial cells, which may in turn act secondarily on cortical thymocytes, or their precursors within the thymus.
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