Abstract

Abstract Lymphocytes from human umbilical cord blood were purified and then separated into rosette-forming cells (T cells) and non-rosette-forming cells (non-T cells). Non-rosette-forming cells were further divided by the technique of rosette formation, after neuraminidase treatment, into surface immunoglobulin (SIg)-carrying cells (B cells) and cells lacking SIg but carrying Fc receptors (null cells). The three cell subsets, T, B, and null cells, were examined for susceptibility to transformation by the B95-8 strain of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) using the criteria of colony formation by transformed cells and/or transformation efficiency as judged by the days required for the first appearance of transformation. Not only the T cells but also the null cells were unsusceptible to transformation by EBV. In contrast, B cells were highly susceptible. In a study of the quantitative relationship between the target cells for viral transformation and those B cells which possessed SIg after an acid pH treatment, 10 lymphocyte preparations from three cord blood samples and seven adult peripheral blood samples were tested individually. The fraction size of transformable cells was determined by the growth-curve procedure for transformed cells while the procedure of direct membrane immunofluorescence with anti-IgM (μ-specific) serum and polyvalent anti-Ig serum was used to determine the fractions of SIg and SIg(M) cells. The actual fraction of EBV target cells was nearly equal to that of SIg(M) B cells but not to that of the total SIg B cells. Thirty-four lymphocyte preparations from eight cord and 26 adult peripheral blood samples were examined for the percentage of SIg B cells and for susceptibility to EBV transformation as assayed by the colony-formation procedure. EBV susceptibility and the fraction of SIg(M) B cells, but not of total SIg B cells, correlated nicely, suggesting that SIg(M)-bearing cells were probably the major target among the B lymphocytes for transformation by EBV.

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