Abstract

Chickens bursectomized at 60 h of incubation are known to be able to produce immunoglobulins (Ig) but not specific antibodies. In the present work bone marrow (BM) cells of 2- and 10-week-old embryonically bursectomized (Bx) chickens were transferred to newly hatched cyclophosphamide-treated chickens for the purpose of studying whether the transplanted cells home into the bursa and gain a capacity to produce specific antibodies. BM cells of normal 2- and 10-week-old chickens were transferred as controls. Cells of 2-week-old control (Co) and of 2- and 10-week-old Bx chickens could to some extent reconstitute serum Ig of the recipients, but were totally incapable of homing into the bursa and of restoring the specific antibody production. Only BM cells of 10-week-old Co chickens could restore the production of specific antibodies without homing into the bursa, indicating their postbursal nature. These findings indicate (a) that 2- and 10-week Bx BM cells have irreversibly bypassed the bursal phase of education, (b) that also the normal BM at the age of 2 weeks contains cells that are capable of Ig but not of specific antibody synthesis and (c) that bursal microenvironment is not necessary for isotype switch, but is essential for creation and expansion of the antibody repertoire.

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