Abstract

The antibody specificity repertoire of lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-reactive B cells has been determined in the spleens and bone marrow (BM) of C57BL/Ka athymic nude mice using a limiting dilution culture system that allows the growth and development of every LPS-reactive B cell into a clone of IgM-secreting cells. In addition, the numbers of “spontaneously” occurring (“background”) IgM-, IgG-, and IgA-secreting cells as well as the “background” IgM antibody specificity repertoire has been assessed in spleens and BM. The frequencies of antigen-specific LPS-reactive B cells of C57BL/Ka nude and thymus-bearing mice showed a great similarity and ranged from 1 in 1000 to 1 in 2500 for sheep red blood cells (SRBC), horse red blood cells (HRBC), and goat red blood cells (GRBC), from 1 in 10 to 1 in 25 for 5-iodo-3-nitrophenyl-coupled (SRBC), from 1 in 15 to 1 in 150 for 4-hydroxy-3,5-dinitrophenyl-coupled SRBC, and from 1 in 70 to 1 in 140 for 2,4,6-trinitrophenyl-coupled SRBC. The specificity repertoire of the “background” IgM-secreting cells differed from that of age-matched thymus-bearing controls and was different in young and old C57BL/Ka nude mice. Within the limitations of having assessed only a minor fraction of the total B-cell antibody specificity repertoire and supposing that nude mice are largely devoid of functional T cells, the data presented suggest that the generation of the specificity repertoire of newly-formed B cells is hardly or not affected by T cells. On the other hand, T cells do affect the expression of the established repertoire, represented by “background” immunoglobulin-secreting cells.

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