Cultures of rat thymic epithelium were used to measure the effect
of thymulin
secretagogues on dye-coupling
and proliferation. Dye-coupling was assessed after the injection of lucifer
yellow dextran which cannot
permeate the connexin pore of gap junctions and the smaller, permeant cascade
blue. In addition to gap
junctional communication, larger intercellular bridges were demonstrated
by
the transfer of lucifer yellow
dextran between cells. The extent of intercellular communication was found
to
be influenced by both cell
density and the number of passages. In control cultures, intercellular
communication was reduced in cell
groups of low (<20 cells/group) or high cell densities
(>100 cells/group) compared with groups of 20–60
cells. The highest coupling indices were found in subcultures 20–30.
Taking these factors into account,
significant decreases in coupling index were observed after pretreatment
of
test cultures with factors known
to influence the secretion of thymulin (5 U/ml interleukin 1
(α and β), 1 μM progesterone, 1 μM oestrogen,
1 μM testosterone, 1 ng/ml adrenocorticotropic hormone,
100 nm
rat growth hormone) but 7.5 ng/ml
thymulin had no effect on dye-coupling. The nonspecific gap junction
uncoupler, octanol, abolished dye-coupling. Cellular proliferation, as
measured
by the uptake of tritiated thymidine, showed that the same
factors that reduced coupling also increased proliferation. None of these
factors affected the number of
multinucleate cells present, except interleukin-1β which caused a
significant reduction in the average number
of nuclei per cell. Thus rat thymic epithelium in vitro provides a model
for
the study of the direct action of
factors on cells of the thymic microenvironment.