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  2. Naive T cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naive_T_cell

    In immunology, a naive T cell (T h 0 cell) is a T cell that has differentiated in the thymus, and successfully undergone the positive and negative processes of central selection in the thymus. Among these are the naive forms of helper T cells ( CD4 + ) and cytotoxic T cells ( CD8 + ).

  3. T cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T_cell

    T cells are grouped into a series of subsets based on their function. CD4 and CD8 T cells are selected in the thymus, but undergo further differentiation in the periphery to specialized cells which have different functions. T cell subsets were initially defined by function, but also have associated gene or protein expression patterns.

  4. Thymectomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thymectomy

    Experiments involving thymectomy in newborn mice showed that it unexpectedly resulted in wasting disease when performed before the mouse was three days old. This is because the thymus is the site where T cells are generated. Removal of the thymus resulted in autoimmunity, in which the immune cells attack the organism's own healthy cells and ...

  5. Thymus transplantation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thymus_transplantation

    Second, a thymus transplantation can cause a non-donor T cell-related GVHD because the recipients thymocytes would use the donor thymus cells as models when going through the negative selection to recognize self-antigens, and could therefore still mistake own structures in the rest of the body for being non-self. This is a rather indirect GVHD ...

  6. Cortical thymic epithelial cells - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cortical_thymic_epithelial...

    Cortical thymic epithelial cells (cTECs) form unique parenchyma cell population of the thymus which critically contribute to the development of T cells. Thymus tissue is compartmentalized into cortex and medulla and each of these two compartments comprises its specific thymic epithelial cell subset. cTECs reside in the outer part- cortex, which ...

  7. Thymus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thymus

    The thymus (pl.: thymuses or thymi) is a specialized primary lymphoid organ of the immune system.Within the thymus, thymus cell lymphocytes or T cells mature. T cells are critical to the adaptive immune system, where the body adapts to specific foreign invaders.

  8. Medullary thymic epithelial cells - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medullary_thymic...

    In 1989, two scientific groups came up with the hypothesis that the thymus expresses genes which are in the periphery, strictly expressed by specific tissues (e.g.: Insulin produced by β cells of the pancreas) to subsequently present these so-called "tissue-restricted antigens" (TRAs) from almost all parts of the body to developing T cells in order to test which TCRs recognize self-tissues ...

  9. Thymocyte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thymocyte

    A thymocyte is an immune cell present in the thymus, before it undergoes transformation into a T cell. [1] Thymocytes are produced as stem cells in the bone marrow and reach the thymus via the blood.