Abstract

Complexes of antigen with specific antibody have been shown to enhance or suppress the specific antibody response in vivo. In vitro, antigen-antibody (Ag-Ab) complexes prepared in a slight antigen excess with rabbit antibody induced proliferation of unprimed rabbit lymphocytes. The Ag-Ab stimulated cells from a number of different normal lymphoid organs, including peripheral blood, bone marrow, spleen, and lymph node, but not thymus. Cells exposed to Ag-Ab for 1 hr and washed, bound Ag-Ab through Fc and complement receptors (CR), but were not induced to proliferate unless additional Ag-Ab was added. Specific antigen, which was otherwise unstimulatory, interacted with Ag-Ab-coated cells to activate them, probably through the cross-linking of membrane-bound ligands. Proliferation stimulated by Ag-Ab involved the interaction of three bone marrow cell subpopulations; a macrophage-enriched, a B-cell-enriched, and an mIgM- cell-enriched population. The separated subpopulations were poorly responsive to Ag-Ab stimulation, even though Ag-Ab bound to cells in each of the populations. Low levels of responsiveness to Ag-Ab also resulted when any two of the three subpopulations were combined. Only when all three subpopulations were mixed, was stimulation equivalent to the levels of stimulation reached by unseparated cells.

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