Abstract

After intravenous immunization of mice with Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or sheep red blood cells (SRBC), the bone marrow can contain large numbers of plaque-forming cells (PFC). By means of parabiosis, it was studied whether or not this appearance of PFC in the bone marrow might be due to a migration of such cells from peripheral lymphoid organs into the marrow, as has been suggested in the literature. Using parabionts consisting of nonimmunized mice and mice immunized with LPS, only background numbers of PFC could be demonstrated in the bone marrow of the nonimmunized mice. In similar experiments, with SRBC as antigen, mice showing high anti-SRBC PFC activity in the bone marrow could only provide for minor numbers of anti-SRBC PFC in the bone marrow of affixed normal mice. These results suggest that migration of PFC can not be the main cause for bone marrow PFC activity in the mouse. This provides additional evidence for our view presented in previous papers of this series that the appearance of PFC activity in the bone marrow is dependent on local maturation of B cells into PFC rather than on immigration of PFC.

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