Abstract
The intestinal mast cells (IMC) were examined in normal and adoptively immunized rats infected with Nippostrongylus brasiliensis. An increase in the numbers of IMC was observed in infected recipients of thoracic duct lymphocytes (TDL) obtained from donor rats which had themselves been infected 10 days previously (Day 10 TDL). The increase in the number of IMC in the mucosa was related to the number of Day 10 TDL transferred into infected recipients. When TDL were fractionated into populations of cells either bearing (sIg +) or lacking (sIg −) surface immunoglobulin, only sIg − cells were able to confer the IMC response. Antigenic stimulation was necessary for the differentiation of intestinal mast cells. There was a marked difference between different strains of rats with regard to worm burden and intestinal mast cell kinetics although the increase in intestinal mast cells was always closely related to the final stage of the rapid phase of worm expulsion. These results are compatible with the concept that intestinal mast cells are derived from T cells and suggest that sIg + cells do not influence IMC differentiation. Alternatively, the possibility that the transferred TDL regulate the differentiation of cells of host origin into IMC cannot be excluded.
Published Version
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