Abstract

Patterns of proliferation of antibody-forming cells after an intravenous immunization with hamster erythrocytes (HRBC) were compared in groups of mice possessing different activities of thymus-derived lymphocytes (T cells). 1) Marked differences in the numbers of hemolysin plaque-forming cells (PFC) after HRBC injection were found among the low- and high-responder normal mice and those pretreated with HRBC in complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA) or incomplete adjuvant (IFA), and they appeared to depend primarily upon the different rates of proliferation of antibody-forming cells rather than on the numbers of antigen-specific lymphocytes initiating the antibody response. 2) The numbers of hemolytic foci were slightly larger in mice with large numbers of PFC (normal SL mice, the pretreated SL and C57BL/6 mice) than in those with small numbers of PFC (normal C57BL/6 mice). The numbers of hemolytic foci increased at almost the same rate from day 2 to day 3 in both groups, while the numbers of PFC increased more efficiently in mice with large numbers of PFC than in those with small numbers of PFC from day 2 to day 3. Individual hemolytic foci appeared to contain larger numbers of PFC in mice with large total numbers of PFC than in those with small total numbers of PFC. 3) The numbers of rosette-forming cells (RFC) were increased by pretreatment with HRBC in CFA and by pretreatment with HRBC in IFA to almost the same extent. Rates of increases in PFC were, however, larger by pretreatment with HRBC in CFA than with HRBC in IFA. These results suggested that the activity of the T cell determined not only the rates of proliferation of antibody-forming cells but also the antibody-producing capacity of each cell.

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