Abstract

The effect of injection of the synthetic corticosteroid dexamethasone sodium phosphate upon the primary response to Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS) was studied in mouse spleen and bone marrow. Daily corticosteroid injections, starting 1 day before immunization with LPS, could suppress the anti-LPS plaque-forming cell (PFC) response in the spleen. The higher the dose of corticosteroids, the more the splenic PFC response was suppressed. On the other hand, the bone marrow PFC response showed a dose-dependent enhancement after corticosteroid injections. This effect was maximal when tested 7 days after antigen injection, and constituted a 3- to 15-fold increase after daily injection of 16 mg dexamethasone/kg body wt. The same effect was found in genetically athymic nude mice, showing that the corticosteroid-mediated enhancement of the anti-LPS PFC response in the bone marrow is not due to elimination of T suppressor cells. Probably the differential effect of corticosteroids upon antibody formation in spleen and bone marrow is due to a redistribution of B-lineage cells, with a resulting accumulation in the bone marrow.

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