REVIEW
◥
IMMUNOLOGY
The function of the thymus and its impact
on modern medicine
Jacques F. A. P. Miller
1,2
*
The lymphoid system is intimately involved in immunological processes. The small lymphocyte that
circulates through blood into lymphoid tissues, then through the lymph and back to the blood through
the thoracic duct, is able to initiate immune responses after appropriate stimulation by antigen.
However, the lymphocytes found in the thymus are deficient in this ability despite the fact that the
thymus plays a central role in lymphocyte production and in ensuring the normal development of
immunological faculty. During embryogenesis, lymphocytes are present in the thymus before they can be
identified in the circulation and in other lymphoid tissues. They become“educated”in the thymus to
recognize a great diversity of peptide antigens bound to the body’s own marker antigen, the major
histocompatibility complex, but they are purged if they strongly react against their own self-components.
Lymphocytes differentiate to become various T cell subsets and then exit through the bloodstream to
populate certain areas of the lymphoid system as peripheral T lymphocytes with distinct markers and
immune functions.
T
hymectomy in the immediate neonatal pe-
riod in mice is associated with a decrease
in the population of Tcells throughout the
body.Asaresult,neonatalthymectomy
impairs various immunological reactivities,
but thymectomy performed later in adult life,
after the lymphoid system has been constructed,
hasnomajoreffectunlessthelymphocytepop-
ulation has been depleted by agents such as
irradiation.
Peripheral T cells are intimately involved in
responding to infections and in reactions such
as delayed-type hypersensitivity (e.g., the tuber-
culin reaction) and foreign tissue graft rejection,
but they are not able to produce antibodies.
Nevertheless, in many cases, T cells are essential
to help, through some type of collaboration,
other lymphocytes originating in bone marrow
(B cells) to respond to antigen by producing
antibody.
The discovery of thymus immune functions
and of the interaction between T and B cells
has had wide repercussions in many areas of
medicine and even in the management of some
cancers.
To survive and resist invasion by pathogenic
organisms, multicellular species have had to
evolve defense systems. In a very general way,
one can distinguish between constitutive mech-
anisms that are innate and nonspecific and
adaptive mechanisms that are specific and
exemplified by acquired immunity. The latter
areafunctionofthecirculatingsmalllympho-
cyte, as first demonstrated by Jim Gowans (1).
The adaptive defense system encompasses both
“humoral immunity,”in which antibodies are
secreted as immunoglobulin molecules, and
“cellular immunity”(2), in which the immune
response is carried out by lymphocytes that do
not produce antibodies.
The thymus occupies a specialized position
in the lymphoid system (3) and differs from
other lymphoid structures both structurally and
functionally. It is situated in the chest behind
the upper part of the sternum or breastbone
and above the heart and extends upward for a
short distance into the neck. It is relatively large
in infancy and in humans reaches a size of 35
to 40 g at puberty. Thereafter, it regresses and
eventually becomes reduced to little more than
a vestigial structure in old age (4). It is divided
into lobules composed of a central part or me-
dulla and a peripheral part or cortex. Its major
cell types are the lymphocytes, epithelial cells,
and dendritic cells. The former are densely
packed in the cortex, where they outnumber
the epithelial cells. The latter are most prom-
inent in the medulla (5–7)Thevarioussteps
in thymus lymphocyte differentiation were dis-
covered in detail after the 1960s, as described
in this review.
During development in the mouse, lympho-
cytes appear first in the thymus and only after
birth in the circulation, spleen, lymph nodes,
gastrointestinal lymphoid tissues, and other
tissues (8). They show practically no mitotic
activity outside the thymus before birth. Lym-
phocyte proliferation in the thymus cortex
exceeds that in any other lymphoid tissues
throughout life. Even with advancing age and
when the thymus involutes, its lymphocyte
mitotic activity is still intense and higher than
in lymph nodes (7). However, most thymus
lymphocytes, unlike lymphocytes elsewhere,
arenotabletoinduceimmuneresponses
when transferred to immunoincompetent
hosts and appropriately stimulated by anti-
gen (9,10).
It
seems reasonable to postulate from these
insights that at least some lymphocytes undergo
a process of maturation in the thymus and
subsequently migrate at various times, before
or after birth depending on the species, to pop-
ulate the rest of the lymphoid system with
immunocompetent cells. However, this was
not established until after the results of neo-
natal thymectomy in the mouse were pub-
lished, as detailed below. We now know how
and where lymphocytes in the thymus acquire
their ability to distinguish self from nonself
and how they differentiate into various T cell
subsets with distinct immune functions that
migrate out to the rest of the lymphoid system.
A long-neglected organ
For centuries, the thymus has remained an
enigmatic organ, and claims and counterclaims
mainly involved questions regarding its func-
tion. The fact that it is a large mass of tissue in
infancy was not appreciated by clinicians in
the early part of the 20th century. Autopsies
performed after severe illnesses such as diph-
theria revealed a shrunken thymus, which
was the result of stress during the infection.
Whenever death occurred in surgery for stress-
unrelated conditions such as congenital heart
defects, it was believed that the large thymus
had interfered with breathing, rather than that
the anesthesia had contributed to death. Some
physicians even prescribed irradiation to reduce
thesizeofthethymus(11), not realizing that
these patients might later develop thyroid tu-
mors or thymomas.
The lymphopoietic function of the thymus
was firmly established in the 1950s, yet immu-
nologists were reluctant to accept its role in
immunity. Thus, unlike circulating or splenic
lymphocytes, thymic lymphocytes failed to
adoptively transfer immunological capacity to
immunodeficient animals. Antibody-forming
plasma cells and germinal centers, so promi-
nent in spleen and lymph nodes, never ap-
peared in the thymus of normal immunized
animals. Furthermore, thymectomy, which had
always been performed in the adult, had never
been associated with immune defects [for re-
view, see (3)]. All of these findings were cited as
arguments against an immune function for the
thymus,whichwasconsideredbymanytobea
vestigial structure, perhaps a“graveyard”for
dying lymphocytes. As late as 1963, Sir Peter
Medawar stated:“We shall come to regard the
presence of lymphocytes in the thymus as an
evolutionary accident of no very great signif-
icance. Lymphocytes are found in other evo-
lutionary relics, such as the palatine and
RESEARCH
Miller,Science369, eaba2429 (2020) 31 July 2020 1of8
1
The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research,
Parkville, Victoria 3052, Australia.
2
Department of Medical
Biology, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3010,
Australia.
*Corresponding author. Email:
[email protected]
on August 14, 2021 http://science.sciencemag.org/Downloaded from