Abstract

The contribution of early splenic B-cell populations to the colonization of the ileal Peyer's patch was investigated following the surgical removal of the spleen in a series of 56-day-old fetal sheep. The fetuses were killed at 140 days of gestation and the ileal Peyer's patch, the distal jejunal lymph node which drains the Peyer's patch, and a peripheral lymph node, the superficial cervical lymph node, were examined. Enzyme and immunohistochemical evaluation concluded that the distribution of B cells, T cells and stromal cells in the ileal Peyer's patch was similar in splenectomized and normal fetal sheep. Thus, the presence of the fetal spleen was not essential for the colonization of the ileal Peyer's patch and other early sites of B-cell accumulation would appear capable of generating the necessary precursor populations. Investigation of B-cell populations in lymph nodes used a combination of terminal deoxynucleotidyl-transferase-mediated deoxyuridine-triphosphate nick-end-labelling (TUNEL) histochemistry and immunofluorescence to determine the average number of apoptotic B cells in the primary follicles of the outer cortex of splenectomized and normal lambs. A significantly increased number of apoptotic B cells was present in the distal jejunal lymph node but not in the superficial cervical lymph node of splenectomized lambs. This finding suggests that splenectomy affected prenatal B-cell development in fetal sheep and raises questions as to the regulation of B-cell lymphopoiesis in a species using a post-rearrangement organ of diversification.

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