Abstract

The synthetic double-stranded polyribonucleotides, poly (rA):poly (rU) and poly (rI):poly (rC), were shown to be potent inhibitors of the in vitro plaque-forming cell (PFC) response to a thymus-dependent (SRBC) and thymus-independent (E. coli 0127 LPS) antigen in mouse C57BL/6 spleen cell cultures. The same polynucleotides had no effect on the PFC response of nude (athymic) mouse spleen cells to E. coli 0127 LPS, suggesting that functional T lymphocytes are necessary for the inhibitory effect. Enhancement effects were modest and inconsistent in the cultures. Poly (rA) and poly (rU) were ineffective as inhibitors. The data indirectly suggest that the inhibition may be due to the early production of interferon by functional T lymphocytes.

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