pubmed-article:6452780 | pubmed:abstractText | The regulatory effect on T lymphocyte proliferation of the differentiator thymosin hormone family (thymosin fr. 5, A. L. Goldstein), Ca2+, and purified inhibitory protein fractions prepared from calf thymus was investigated in C57Bl/6 mice. 1.2 mM Ca2+ concentration was the most favourable for murine thymocyte growth in culture. Net protein synthesis was transitorily inhibited by Cu2+ concentrations higher than 2 mM. This inhibition was followed by a marked inhibition of DNA synthesis 2 hrs later. The effect of thymosin fr. 5 was slight, of short duration, and oscillatory in nature; in contrast, chalone-T preparations inhibited thymocyte DNA synthesis permanently up to 12 hrs of cultivation. When spleen cells taken from mice treated with the immunoadjuvant Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) were exposed to chalone-T in culture, then stimulated with PHA, a reduced proliferative response was measured in chalone-T pretreated cultures compared to controls or spleen cells from normal non-BCG-activated mice. This result had led us to suggest that chalone-T has a dual effect on thymocytes, viz. it inhibits cell cycle progression and induces the phenotypic conversion of suppressor T lymphocytes. The multifactorial concept of T lymphocyte production is discussed. | lld:pubmed |