Abstract
Heat-killed BCG in paraffin exerted a lethal effect on CS7BL/6 mice irradiated lethally and transferred with syngeneic bone marrow cells. Such an effect was not detectable when mice were subjected to adult thymectomy and used as the hosts. Lymphoid cells from such nonthymectomized mice exhibited cytotoxicity to syngeneic tumor cells but not to allogeneic tumor cells in an in vivo cytotoxicity test and induced splenomegaly in sublethally irradiated syngeneic recipients after systemic transfer. The cytotoxicity of such lymphoid cells was abolished by a treatment with anti-θ serum and complement. In the bone marrow of mice irradiated and transferred with bone marrow cells, the number of nucleated cells, the ratio of myeloid to erythroid cell series, and the percentage of lymphocytes were increasd by BCG injection. These results suggest the possibility that self-tolerance may be broken by BCG stimulation in the process of reconstitution of lymphoid cells in the irradiated mice.
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