REGULATION OF THE SECONDARY ANTIBODY RESPONSE IN VITRO
Open Access
- 1 November 1969
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 130 (5) , 1003-1029
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.130.5.1003
Abstract
Two opposite effects of actinomycin D on antibody synthesis have been studied in organ cultures of rabbit lymph node fragments. These cultures were prepared from previously primed rabbits and stimulated with antigen(s) on day 0 to yield a secondary response, whose inductive phase extended to about day 9 and whose productive phase may last for several months in the serum-free medium described here. Concentrations of actinomycin D above 0.01 µM (0.012 µg/ml) produce inhibition of antibody synthesis during both phases of the response. However, antibody synthesis is about 10 times more sensitive to inhibition by this drug when it is added during the inductive phase than during the productive phase. During the latter phase, synthesis is more rapidly terminated as the drug level approaches 10 /µM (12.5 µg/ml). At this level the 50% synthesis time is about 2.8 hr, which is identical with that found when 5–10 µM puromycin is added to the medium of parallel cultures. Transient enhancement of antibody synthesis is frequently produced by a brief exposure to low levels of actinomycin D (generally less than 0.01 µM). Enhancement appears in precise temporal association with actinomycin pulses added for 2 days or less only between days 6 and 16. This apparent enhancement of antibody synthesis resembles the increased enzyme synthesis described by Garren et al. (6) and led to a search for an antibody-inhibitory material (AIM) whose synthesis might be stopped preferentially by low levels of the drug. Stimulated lymph node cultures produce between days 6 and 15 a nondialyzable material which inhibits antibody synthesis during the productive phase of heterologous antigen-antibody culture systems. Just as enhancement with low levels of actinomycin D appears within 2 hr after the drug has been added to cultures, so inhibition occurs within 4 hr of adding AIM to cultures during their productive phase. These observations suggest that AIM is analogous to the translational "repressor" postulated by Garren et al. (6). AIM has relevance in two areas of immunology: (a) it may be the explanation for many examples of antigenic competition, and (b) it may represent a normal control mechanism for the productive phase.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- "Superinduction" of tyrosine transaminase in hepatoma cell cultures: differential inhibition of synthesis and turnover by actionomycin D.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1968
- The effect of an alpha-globulin preparation and of polyribonuclease complexes on humoral antibody formation.1968
- INHIBITION OF ANTIBODY PRODUCTION BY RIBONUCLEASES1966
- Tyrosine Transaminase Induction in Mammalian Cells in Tissue CultureCold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology, 1966
- Induction of Several Adaptive Enzymes by Actinomycin DScience, 1964
- STUDIES ON IN VITRO ANTIBODY PRODUCTION: II. THE EFFECT OF NEWCASTLE DISEASE VIRUS ON ANTIBODY SYNTHESISCanadian Journal of Microbiology, 1964
- Differential DialysisScience, 1964
- Studies on the control of enzyme synthesis during the early embryonic development of the sea urchinsBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Specialized Section on Nucleic Acids and Related Subjects, 1964
- The differential effect of actinomycin D on the biosynthesis of enzymes in Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus cereus☆Biochimica et Biophysica Acta, 1963
- MICROMETHODS FOR THE STUDY OF PROTEINS AND ANTIBODIES .1. PROCEDURE AND GENERAL APPLICATIONS OF HEMAGGLUTINATION AND HEMAGGLUTINATION-INHIBITION REACTIONS WITH TANNIC ACID AND PROTEIN-TREATED RED BLOOD CELLS1954