Abstract
Restoration of impaired antibody response to sheep red blood cells (SRBC) in spleen cell cultures from mice treated with heterologous antilymphocyte globulin (ALG) was studied by adding normal cells from various sources, to explore the problems of cell-cooperation in anti-SRBC antibody response and the target of ALG. When spleen cells from ALG-treated mice were separated into macrophage-rich and lymphoid cell-rich subpopulations, only the latter was found to be impaired in the ability for anti-SRBC antibody response. Addition of even a small number of normal allogeneic spleen cells sufficiently restored the impaired anti-SRBC antibody response of the spleen cells from ALG-treated mice. By use of allo-antisera, most hemolysin plaque-forming cells (PFC) generated in such cultures were proved to be derived from the cells of ALG-treated mice. Restoration was also achieved by adding thymus-derived cells, which were obtained from spleens of mice heavily irradiated and repopulated with syngeneic thymus cells, or lymphoid cells directly collected from thymuses. All results indicate that ALG selectively depletes the thymus-derived antigen reactive cells (ARC) in the spleen cell population, and that ARC supplied from normal spleen or thymus can interact with plaque-forming cell precursors (PFCP) that remain intact in the spleen cell population of ALG-treated mice. The results also suggest that a single ARC interacts with more than one PFCP and makes them develop into PFC.
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