Abstract
Rat spleen and lymph node lymphocytes have been frozen with dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) at 1 °C/min and stored at −196 °C for 10 min. The functional recovery of the cell populations was monitored by the mitogenic response (uptake of [3H]thymidine) to phytohemagglutinin (PHA) or pokeweed mitogen (PWM) in culture after thawing. With 5 to 10% DMSO in the freezing medium, frozen-thawed lymph node cells were found to retain about 40% of their response to PHA. In contrast, frozen-thawed spleen cells responded better to PHA than fresh cells. The response to PWM was markedly decreased in both spleen and lymph node cell cultures. A similar effect was observed when DMSO was added to the culture medium of fresh spleen cells, i.e., an augmentation of the response to PHA and a suppression of the response to PWM. However, the concentrations of DMSO needed to induce this effect was more than 10-fold higher than that present in the culture medium after freezing and thawing. Since removal of adherent cells from the spleen cell population also produced an augmentation of the response to PHA, it is suggested that the freezing procedure and DMSO may have an inhibitory effect on suppressor cell functions present in spleen cell populations.
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