• 1 January 1983
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 50  (1) , 139-148
Abstract
Successful long-term culture of murine thymic macrophages was achieved by plating adherent thymic cells, in the presence of L cell-conditioned medium, on dishes coated with an extracellular matrix. Adherent thymic cells in normal conditions of in vitro culture do not proliferate. Those maintained on plastic tissue-culture dishes, and exposed to L cell-conditioned medium, proliferate slowly to a limited degree and form very small colonies. In contrast, when cultured in dishes coated with an extracellular matrix formed by corneal endothelial cells, in the presence of L cell-conditioned medium, adherent thymic cells proliferate rapidly and after 12-21 days in culture form large colonies (about 3-5 mm in diameter). The proliferating cells were identified to be mononuclear phagocytes by their morphological apeparance, their ability to ingest both bacteria and antibody-coated erythrocytes and by their non-specific esterase activity. These cells were also shown to exhibit cell surface antigens that are characteristic of differentiated macrophages, e.g., Fc receptors and the specific macrophage cell surface marker F4/80. A high percentage of these cultured cells were found to bear I-A antigens. The adherent thymic mononuclear phagocytes could be trypsinized and passaged while maintaining both their ability to proliferate and their specific macrophage characteristics for a period of 70 days. Thus, monocyte-macrophage stem cells are present in the thymus, and under appropriate in vitro conditions, can be made to proliferate and mature to I-A-bearing macrophages.