Abstract
Spleen cells of various mouse strains (e.g. BALB/c, C311, and CBA) reacted towards MAS (a mitogen derived from supernatants of cultured Mycoplasma arthritidis) with a marked lymphoproliferative response. This reactivity was T-cell-dependent. It was reduced by 90% after removal of macrophages by passage of the spleen cells through Sephadex G-10 columns. Addition of 2-mercaptoethanol (2-ME) to macrophage-depleted CBA spleen cells completely restored the response to MAS. Spleen cells of C57BL/6 and C57BL/10 mice were unreactive to MAS, even in the presence of macrophages, and this non-reactivity was controlled by the I-region of H-2. Other mouse strains that, similarly to C57BL/6, lack the expression of I-E on the cell surface (that is, mice of the haplotype H-2f, H-2q, and H-2s) were also non-responsive to MAS. However, the addition of 2-ME to spleen cells of non-responder mice resulted in high lymphoproliferative responses to MAS, which were as high as those of CBA spleen cells. The reaction of C57BL/6 spleen cells to MAS in the presence of 2-ME again was T-cell-dependent, as shown by data with spleen cells of homozygous nude mice and spleen cells treated by anti-thy-1 and C. A macrophage dependency of this response was also evident. When C57BL/6 spleen cells were vigorously freed of accessory cells by the use of nylon wool columns, the MAS response could no longer be restored by 2-ME.
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