Immunoglobulin-Positive Mononuclear Cells in Human Peripheral Blood: Detection by Mixed Anti-Globulin and Direct Anti-Globulin-Rosetting Reactions

Abstract
Ig-bearing mononuclear cells were identified in Ficoll-Hypaque preparations of human peripheral blood by using mixed anti-globulin (MAG) and direct anti-globulin rosettes; indicator cells consisted of sheep erythrocytes coated with human F(ab′)2 or anti-F(ab′)2 antibody, respectively. Of the cell populations isolated from 10 normal subjects, a mean of 68% was lymphocytes. However, fewer than 50% of the cells with detectable surface Ig were lymphocytes. On viable cell preparations using chromic chloride-treated sheep erythrocytes (CrCl3SRBC) coated with anti-F(ab′)2 antibody, a mean of 20.1% of the lymphocytes formed rosettes, i.e., were B. Up to 6% of peripheral blood lymphocytes formed mixed Ig-rosettes and E-rosettes. On viable lymphocytes using F(ab′)2-coated CrCl3 SRBC, MAG rosettes were insensitive in detection of B lymphocytes. Formaldehyde treatment of lymphocytes increased the number of B cells detectable to 25.5% of the lymphocyte population. Study of T-enriched and B-enriched populations showed that the observed increase in B cell reactivity was real and not due to MAG-rosetting T cells. A one-stage procedure for T and B lymphocyte separation is described.

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