Abstract

Utilizing a variety of lymphoid tissues from three common laboratory species, comparative studies were performed to investigate the competence of the dissociated cells to respond to a heterologous erythrocyte with the development of specific plaque-forming cells. Dissociated spleen cells harvested from BDF1 mice consistently developed specific plaque-forming cells (PFC) to sheep red blood cells (SRBC), while hamster spleen cells inconsistently developed specific antibody-forming cells to SRBC. Under identical conditions, guinea pig spleen cells did not develop significant numbers of PFC to SRBC. However, lymph node cell cultures of all three species tested yielded specific PFC. In the mouse and hamster lymph node cell cultures, the yield of PFC per culture or per 10 6 recovered viable cells was always greater than the yield from companion spleen cell cultures. Guinea pig mesenteric lymph node cell cultures developed the major PFC response to SRBC, while both mesenteric and peripheral lymph node cell cultures from hamsters were equivalent in their response to SRBC. The data demonstrate that it is possible to develop a primary antibody response to SRBC in vitro utilizing normal endogenous hamster or guinea pig lymphoid cells, if lymph nodes are the source of cells.

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