Abstract
Direct access of lymphoid precursors to the thymic environment appears to be an essential step in the differentiation of normal T cell populations and it is possible that intimate cellular interactions between T cells and the thymic stroma are involved in selective processes leading to self-tolerance and major histocompatibility complex (MHC) restriction. As an approach to investigating the intrathymic environment, MHC antigen expression during normal thymic development and lymphopoiesis, and in the embryonic thymus of T cell-deficient nude mice, has been examined. Evidence has been obtained to show that MHC antigens controlled by both the K and I regions are expressed from an early stage on epithelial cells in normal thymus development but that the thymic rudiment in nude mice shows a selective absence of I regions antigens. The implications of these findings for T cell development and the derivation and constitution of the intrathymic environment are considered.