Abstract

Germ-free (GF) animals exhibit an abnormally diminished, cell-mediated immune response which can be rapidly normalized by bacterial colonization of the intestine. This conventionalization suggests that the development and/or regulation of the immune system is dependent upon intestinal bacteria or their products. Here we consider the ontogeny of gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT) immunocytes by isolating and characterizing the intestinal lamina propria cells (LPC) of GF rats responding to bacterial colonization or an irrelevant protein antigen, and compared to LPC of specific pathogen-free (SPF) rats which were conventionalized (CV) from birth. Isolation of cells was accomplished by successive EDTA washings of small intestine to remove the epithelium, and enzymatic digestion of the tissue generating single-cell suspensions. Resulting cell suspensions were characterized by monoclonal antibodies directed against leukocyte epitopes using flow cytometry. Functional characterization was measured by the tritiated thymidine proliferation assay with concanalin A (Con A) and lipopolysaccharide (LPS) as co-stimulators. Germ-free and SPF rats had fewer total LPC than CV rats. Antibody staining revealed that GF rats had fewer total leukocytes than CV and SPF rats, and that CV rats had a greater percentage of T-cells and cells positive for the C3 receptor than GF rats. Co-stimulation of LPC with mitogens only increased proliferation of cells from CV rats compared to GF and SPF rats. In addition, spleen cells from CV rats demonstrated significantly enhanced proliferative responses compared to spleen cells from GF rat and were more analogous to spleen cells from SPF rats in their ability to proliferate in vitro, with and without mitogens. We conclude that T-cells and CD35-positive (C3BR+) cells are recruited and/or proliferate in response to intestinal bacteria and/or their products, and that this results in the induction of immune competency.

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