ABSTRACT
The skin and lymphoid organs of Mexican hairless dogs and their hairless offspring were examined histologically. The hairless dogs lacked most hairs except for sparse hairs on the head, tail and feet. The skin of newborn pups consisted of a thick epidermis with epidermal ingrowths forming the rudiments of hair follicles. In older dogs more than 2 months of age, however, the epidermis was thin and the ingrowths were few. Neither hair follicles nor skin glands were present. The hairy skin of the head and tail had hair follicles with sebaceous glands. Regarding the lymphoid organs, the newborn pups possessed a thymus like haired pups. But in the older dogs more than 2 months of age, the thymus was atrophied and the lymphocyte population was too sparse to demarcate the cortex and the medulla. Lymphocyte accumulation in older dogs was also poor in the spleen and mesenteric lymph nodes. The present findings indicate that the hairlessness of the Mexican hairless dogs and their descendants is accompanied by early atrophy of the thymus after birth, and is followed by poor accumulation of lymphocytes in the thymus-dependent area of the spleen and the mesenteric lymph nodes. The defect of the thymus in the hairless dog seems to be different from that in athymic nude mice and rats. Further studies are needed to elucidate the immunological response and function in hairless dogs.