The inflammatory response to lymph node cells from adjuvant‐diseased rats: Late changes in local and systemic leucocyte counts in the Wistar strain
- 1 September 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Pathology
- Vol. 132 (1) , 11-21
- https://doi.org/10.1002/path.1711320103
Abstract
In contrast to previous studies on Lewis rats, lymph node cells from Freund''s complete adjuvant (FCA)-treated Wistar rats did not stimulate granuloma formation when injected into s.c. sponge implants in syngeneic recipient rats. No morphological differences were observed between the cell suspensions from FCA-treated and incomplete adjuvant (FIA)-treated control animals. Following transfer of both types of lymph node cells, granuloma exudate neutrophil counts were high after 3 days and rapidly declined thereafter; exudate monocyte/macrophage counts slowly increased. In the control group of recipient rats, this latter increase was associated with increased peripheral blood monocyte counts by day 11; in rats receiving FCA-treated cells, the only significant changes in blood cells were increased total leukocytes on day 3 and increased neutrophil counts on day 7. Another difference between FIA and FCA groups was that exudate small lymphocyte counts in the former group fell rapidly between days 3 and 7; in the latter group this fall was significantly slower. These leukocyte changes, both local and systemic, apparently reflect certain more sustained cell stimulating effects of FCA-treated lymph node cells when compared with FIA-treated cells, particularly on neutrophils and small lymphocytes. In rats which received FIA-treated lymph node cells, significant correlations existed between exudate and peripheral blood small lymphocyte counts on day 3 and between exudate monocyte/macrophage and neutrophil counts and granuloma weight on day 7. No significant correlations were found following injection of FCA-treated cells. FCA treatment apparently stimulates the appearance of suppressor functions of lymph node cells from Wistar rats, which together with their other more sustained inflammatory activities result in the net failure to observe significant changes in or correlations between leukocyte counts and granuloma formation. These findings may shed light on the relative insensitivity of Wistar rats to the induction of adjuvant arthritis.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- The inflammatory response to lymph node cells from adjuvant‐diseased rats. Relative contributions of donor and recipient cell populationsThe Journal of Pathology, 1980
- Cannulated sponge implants in rats for the study of time-dependent pharmacological influences on inflammatory granulomataJournal of Pharmacological Methods, 1979
- Alterations in Granulation Tissue Growth Induced in vivo by Lymphocytes from Adjuvant-Diseased RatsInternational Archives of Allergy and Immunology, 1979
- Early colonisation of a local inflammatory lesion and its relationship to changes in systemic leucocyte availability: A study of turpentine-induced lesions in the ratThe Journal of Pathology, 1978
- A major contributory cause of arthritis in adjuvant-inoculated rats: GranulocytesInflammation Research, 1977
- Alterations in peripheral blood leucocyte distribution in response to local inflammatory stimuli in the ratThe Journal of Pathology, 1976
- QUANTITATIVE STUDY ON THE PRODUCTION AND KINETICS OF MONONUCLEAR PHAGOCYTES DURING AN ACUTE INFLAMMATORY REACTIONThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1973
- A quantitative study of leucocyte emigration in chronic inflammatory granulomataThe Journal of Pathology and Bacteriology, 1967
- The mononuclear response to intrapleural injection in the ratThe Journal of Pathology and Bacteriology, 1966
- A lymph‐node permeability factor in the tuberculin reactionThe Journal of Pathology and Bacteriology, 1964