Abstract

The kinetics of thymidine uptake in human peripheral lymphocytes stimulated by allogenic cells, antigen E (ragweed allergen) and a variety of mitogens can generally be divided into four consecutive phases. First, a lag period with no increase in thymidine uptake, then a short period of rapid change in uptake, followed by a log-linear growth period and finally a decay phase. In this report we examine in detail the characteristics of the third, log-linear growth phase. Since, as discussed in the preceding paper, thymidine uptake is proportional to the number of cells acumulating thymidine, we can calculate from the log-linear growth period an apparent doubling time. We show that for five different stimulating agents the cells reach a log-linear growth phase of varying length and that the doubling times show little variation. This invariance indicates that, despite possible variation in cell death and recruitment rates, the rate of proliferation is in all cases dominated by the generation time of human lymphocytes.

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