Abstract

Cells from intraembryonic mesenchyme, yolk sac, bursa of Fabricius, and thymus from chicken embryos at different stages of development were studied for the presence of IgG Fc receptors by EA-rosette formation and binding of heat-aggregated chicken IgG (agg IgG). Cells with Fc receptors were found in high frequency in the intraembryonic mesenchyme as early as on the third day of incubation, in the yolk sac on the 7th day, in the bursa on the 10th day, and in the thymus on the 16th day of embryonic development. In the bursa the number of agg IgG binding cells increased with the age of the embryo and remained high after hatching, whereas in the thymus the peak value (76%) was observed on the 16th embryonic day, and after hatching only about 10% of the cells expressed the agg IgG receptors. The results also suggest that the appearance of IgG Fc receptors precedes the expression of B-L (Ia-like) antigens and of cytoplasmic and surface immunoglobulins on early lymphoid cells of the chicken embryo.

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