Abstract
Rabbits were immunized with ovalbumin emulsified in complete Freund's adjuvant subcutaneously or with ovalbumin (OA) in saline intravenously. They were skin tested at intervals of time in order to determine the optimal sensitization time for the induction of the delayed skin reaction. The rabbits were also sacrificed and cell suspensions were prepared from the following organs: spleen, thymus, bone marrow, lymph nodes (popliteal), appendix, sacculus rotundus, and Peyer's patches. Peritoneal exudate cells were also obtained. These cell suspensions were tested for their ability to be inhibited in their migration in vitro by the specific sensitizing antigen. It was observed that the migration of all of the cell suspensions except for the bone marrow and peritoneal exudate cells could be inhibited by OA, but not by BGG, a non-cross-reacting antigen. Inhibition of migration was most marked at 3–4 weeks postsensitization and was negligible by 8–12 weeks, at a time when the delayed skin reaction was as extensive as in the early postsensitization period. Furthermore, the migration of cells of rabbits immunized with OA in saline intravenously was also markedly inhibited. It is concluded that, in the rabbit, different cell pathways are operative in the induction of the delayed skin reaction, on the one hand, and the facilitation of migration inhibition, on the other.
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