Abstract

Chicken thymus, spleen, and bursa lymphocytes were isolated by different methods and incubated under differing conditions in order to obtain and characterize avian lymphokines. The biological activity of lymphokine—containing cell culture supernatants was measured by their antiviral activity (interferon(IFN)-units) and by their capacity to induce cytostatic effects in bone-marrow-derived macrophages (50 % cytostasis—inducing dose, CID). Lymphokine production by thymus lymphocytes required concanavalin A (ConA)—stimulation, while spleen cells, when cultured at high density, released CID and IFN activities into the culture medium even without mitogen-stimulation. By way of comparison, the highest lymphokine content was found in the supernatant of lymphocyte cultures, which were incubated for 72 hours at 41°C after stimulation with an optimal ConA dose. For stimulation of thymus lymphocytes 30 μg ConA/ml were found to be optimal, independent of serum content and cell density in the cultures. In contrast, the optimal ConA dose for spleen lymphocytes not only depended on the serum content but also on the cell density in the cultures and varied within a range of 2.5 μg and 45 μg ConA/ml.

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