INITIATION OF ANTIBODY RESPONSES BY DIFFERENT CLASSES OF LYMPHOCYTES
Open Access
- 1 October 1969
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 130 (4) , 895-906
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.130.4.895
Abstract
Thoracic duct cells and spleen cells were tested for their ability to restore the primary antibody response of X-irradiated rats to bovine serum albumin (BSA), sheep red blood cells (SRBC), horse spleen femtin (HSF), and Salmonella typhi flagella. Spleen cells were at least as efficient as thoracic duct cells in restoring the response to BSA, HSF, and Salmonella typhi flagella. In further experiments thoracic duct cells lacking large dividing lymphocytes were tested for their ability to restore the primary response. Large lymphocytes were eliminated by the in vitro incubation of thoracic duct cells for 24 hr at 37°C or by treatment of thoracic duct cell donors with the mitotic inhibitor vinblastine sulfate 24 hr prior to cannulation of the thoracic duct. Experiments with SRBC show that incubated cells and cells from vinblastine-treated donors are as efficient as normal cells in restoring the primary antibody response. On the other hand, experiments with HSF and Salmonella typhi flagella show that incubated cells and cells from vinblastine-treated donors are about five times less efficient than normal cells in restoring the response. Normal thoracic duct cells were more efficient than incubated cells but less efficient than cells from vinblastine-treated donors in restoring the early response to BSA. The experimental findings indicate that the classes of thoracic duct lymphocytes which initiate the primary antibody response to SRBC differ from the classes which initiate the response to HSF and Salmonella typhi flagella, or BSA.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Specific Inactivation of Antigen-reactive Cells with 125I-Labelled AntigenNature, 1969
- FURTHER STUDIES ON THE ROLE OF CIRCULATING LYMPHOCYTES IN THE INITIATION OF PRIMARY ANTIBODY RESPONSES TO DIFFERENT ANTIGENSProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1969
- Differences in the Distribution of Antigen Reactive Cells in the Lymphoid Tissues of the Rat and MouseExperimental Biology and Medicine, 1969
- CELL TO CELL INTERACTION IN THE IMMUNE RESPONSEThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1968
- The role of lymphocytes in antibody formation I. Restoration of the haemolysin response in X -irradiated rats with lymphocytes from normal and immunologically tolerant donorsProceedings of the Royal Society of London. B. Biological Sciences, 1967
- THE CARRIAGE OF IMMUNOLOGICAL MEMORY BY SMALL LYMPHOCYTES IN THE RATThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1966
- The Proliferative State of Antigen-Sensitive Precursors of Hemolysin-Producing Cells, Determined by the Use of the Inhibitor, VinblastineThe Journal of Immunology, 1966
- THE ANTIBODY RESPONSE OF RATS DEPLETED OF LYMPHOCYTES BY CHRONIC DRAINAGE FROM THE THORACIC DUCTThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1963
- Purification and chemical properties of flagellinArchives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 1959
- 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