The development of pre-T cells with productive TCR-beta rearrangements can be mediated by each the pre-T cell receptor (pre-TCR), the TCR-alphabeta as well as the TCR-gammadelta, albeit by distinct mechanisms. Although the TCR-gammadelta affects CD4-8- precursor cells irrespective of their rearrangement status by TCR-beta mechanisms not involving TCR-beta selection, both the pre-TCR and the TCR-alphabeta select only cells with productive TCR-beta genes for expansion and maturation. The TCR-alphabeta appears to be much less effective than the pre-TCR because of the paucity of TCR-alpha proteins in TCR-beta-positive precursors since an early expressed transgenic TCR-alphabeta can largely substitute for the pre-TCR. Thus, the TCR-alphabeta can assume a role not only in the rescue from programmed cell death of CD4+8+ but also of CD4-8- thymocytes. In evolution this double function of the TCR-alphabeta may have been responsible for the maturation of alphabeta T cells before the advent of the pre-TCR-alpha chain.