The stromal cells of the thymus of sham-irradiated and sublethal fission neutron-irradiated CBA/H mice were analyzed with immunohistology, using monoclonal antibodies directed to I-A and H-2K antigens as well as specific determinants for cortical and medullary stromal elements. In the control thymuses, I-A expression in the thymus shows a reticular staining pattern in the cortex and a confluent staining pattern in the medulla. In contrast, H-2K expression is mainly confluently located in the medulla. Whole body irradiation with 2.5 Gy fission neutrons reduces within 24 hr the cortex to a rim of vacuolized "nurse cell-like" epithelial cells, largely depleted of lymphoid cells. The localization of I-A antigens changes in the cortex and I-A determinants are no longer associated with or localized on epithelial reticular cells. Medullary stromal cells, however, are more or less unaffected. A high rate of phagocytosis is observed during the first 3 days after irradiation. About 5 days after irradiation, the thymus becomes highly vascularized and lymphoid cells repopulate the cortex. The repopulation of the thymic cortex coincides with the appearance of a bright H-2K expression in the cortex which is associated with both stromal cells as well as lymphoid blasts. During the regeneration of the thymus, the thymic stromal architecture is restored before the expression of cell surface-associated reticular MHC staining patterns. The observed sequential changes in the thymic microenvironment are related to the lymphoid repopulation of the thymus.

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