THE EFFECT OF ANTI-LYMPHOCYTE GLOBULIN ON CELL-MEDIATED RESISTANCE TO INFECTION
Open Access
- 1 May 1969
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 129 (5) , 993-1012
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.129.5.993
Abstract
The specificity of anti-lymphocyte globulin (ALG) has been used to analyze an immune mechanism which is mediated by immunologically committed lymphoid cells to the apparent exclusion of humoral antibody. Rabbit antimouse lymphocyte globulin completely suppressed the immunity which can be passively transferred with Listeria-immune lymphoid cells from actively infected donors. When prospective donors were given a single dose of 1.0 mg of ALG, it remained active against immune lymphoid cells transferred 24 hr later; yet immune cells in the spleens of donors could not be inactivated in situ by even larger doses of ALG given 24 hr prior to cell harvest. In keeping with this finding, the immunity to reinfection with Listeria was not suppressed by a single dose of ALG, indicating that the immunologically active cells in the spleen are not accessible to intravenously administered ALG. On the other hand, protracted treatment with ALG did abolish most of the memory of a previous infection in intact animals. From this and other evidence, it was concluded that immunologically committed cells are vulnerable to attack by ALG only if they circulate. While in circulation, they make contact both with ALG and the phagocytic elements of the reticuloendothelial system which appear to be responsible for their destruction. Four lines of evidence indicated that the suppression of anti-Listeria resistance with ALG depends upon destruction of immune lymphoid cells and not to any action it has on host macrophages. It is possible to infer from this that immunity to L. monocytogenes depends upon a two cell system in which the donor lymphoid cells provide the immunological reactivity to the organism and recipient macrophages provide the mechanism through which resistance is expressed. Accompanying papers provide additional support for this view, and reasons for believing that delayed-type hypersensitivity and acquired cellular resistance are mediated by the same population of immunologically committed lymphoid cells.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- THE INFLUENCE OF IMMUNOLOGICALLY COMMITTED LYMPHOID CELLS ON MACROPHAGE ACTIVITY IN VIVOThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1969
- CELL TO CELL INTERACTION IN THE IMMUNE RESPONSEThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1968
- Differential Effect of Heterologous Anti-Lymphocyte Serum on Antibody-Producing Cells and Antigen-Sensitive CellsThe Journal of Immunology, 1968
- Enhancing Effect of Antilymphocytic Serum on Mycobacterial Infections in MiceNature, 1968
- MODE OF ACTION OF ANTI-LYMPHOCYTE GLOBULIN .I. DISTRIBUTION OF RABBIT ANTI-LYMPHOCYTE GLOBULIN INJECTED INTO RATS AND MICE1968
- THE RELATIONSHIP OF DELAYED HYPERSENSITIVITY TO ACQUIRED CELLULAR RESISTANCEBritish Medical Bulletin, 1967
- THE CARRIAGE OF IMMUNOLOGICAL MEMORY BY SMALL LYMPHOCYTES IN THE RATThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1966
- THE IMMUNOLOGICAL BASIS OF ACQUIRED CELLULAR RESISTANCEThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1964
- CELLULAR RESISTANCE TO INFECTIONThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1962
- OUTPUT OF LYMPHOCYTES FROM THORACIC DUCT OF UNANAESTHETIZED MICE1962