Rheumatoid Synovial Fluid Reconstitutes the B‐Cell Defect in CBA/N Mice

Abstract
Synovial fluid from patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA-SF) contains a biological activity which can replace T cells for activation of antibody secretion in human blood lymphoid cells and which can also induce the selective differentiation of IgG2b-secreting cells in lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-pre-activated mouse spleen cells. The B-cell activity of this factor was studied in CBA/N mice which have an X-linked B-cell immunodeficiency which manifests itself as a defective humoral response to certain thymus-independent antigens (TI-2). RA-SF has now been shown to reconstitute partly the B-cell deficiency in CBA/N splenic B cells in vitro. Addition of RA-SF to LPS-pretreated cell cultures results in IgG2b secretion in CBA/N spleen cells as well. In contrast to cells from normal CBA mice, cells from CBA/N mice cannot respond to interleukin 4 (IL-4) after addition of LPS with production of IgG1 antibodies in vitro. However, the addition of RA-SF completely restores a normal IL-4-induced IgG1 response. No other biologically active factors have been shown to allow the production of IgG antibody producing cells in CBA/N splenic B cells. It is postulated that the xid immunodeficiency could be the result of a deficient production of a biological activity which is abundant in RA-SF.