Abstract

Peripheral blood lymphocytes from healthy humans formed stable E rosettes with sheep erythrocytes (SRBC) at 37°C after culture with phytohemagglutinin or the divalent cation ionophore A23187. Cells manifesting this phenomenon exhibited “blast” morphology, appeared by 16 hr of culture, increased dramatically in percentage and absolute number by 62 hr, and persisted in large numbers for the duration of culture (182 hr). Unstimulated lymphocytes formed rosettes at 4°C but not at 37°C. Increased “stickiness” due to surface-bound lectin mitogen was not the cause of rosette formation at 37°C. Formation of E rosettes at 37°C has previously been considered a property of lymphocytes less differentiated than the circulating T cell (e.g., thymocytes, leukemic lymphoblasts). The present findings indicate that this property can be “reexpressed” during blastogenesis in culture. This observation also demonstrates technical problems associated with the use of SRBC to quantitate lymphocytes with complement receptors (B cells) by the EAC rosette assay in culture. False positives resulted from 37°C E rosette formation, but this was overcome by replacing the SRBC with guinea pig erythrocytes in the EAC assay.

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